PLEASE NOTE: In order to ensure social distancing in the Noble Theater, tickets and seating capacity are limited. Unavailable seats and rows are marked.
All moviegoers are advised to arrive at least 10 minutes before showtime. We reserve the right to deny entry after the start of the feature.
For the safety and well-being of all of our staff and guests, we ask that you refrain from attending in-person screenings if you have a fever or are feeling ill.
Protective masks are required in the Noble Theater and throughout the Museum. They are available for purchase at the box office and in the Museum Store.
Thank you for helping our community stay safe!
“Marking the 500th anniversary of Raphael’s death, the greatest exhibition ever held of his works took place in Rome. Raphael Revealed offers a privileged look inside this once-in-a-lifetime show, which looks at Raphael’s celebrated paintings and drawings as well as his work in architecture, poetry, and design for sculpture, tapestry, and prints. Featuring over two hundred masterpieces – more than a hundred of which have been brought together for the first time – this landmark exhibition celebrates the life and work of Raffaello Sanzio da Urbino, an artist whose brief career shaped the course of Western culture like few others before or since.
With unprecedented loans from the Louvre, Uffizi, National Gallery of Art, the Prado Museum and more, the exhibition and this film provide an unprecedented opportunity to see the breadth of Raphael’s skill, creativity and ingenuity. Award-winning director Phil Grabsky provides a fresh look at this giant of the Renaissance, and shows why he is considered one of the all-time greats. The film covers his life in Rome, and includes unique footage of the ancient Rome that was such a powerful influence, including rare footage of Nero’s Golden House that Raphael himself visited. More than just a painter, Raphael was one of the most extraordinary artists of the Renaissance but is often misunderstood or mythologised. On the basis of this extraordinary exhibition in Rome, this film allows Raphael, for the first time, to be truly revealed.” -EOS
Director Phil Grabsky | 2020 | In English | 88 min | NR | DCP