Artists A–Z
Discover the master artists whose works grace the Vatican Museums. From Renaissance giants like Michelangelo and Raphael to Baroque masters like Caravaggio, explore the creators behind the world's most celebrated art collection.
The Vatican Museums showcase works by 71 renowned artists spanning from ancient times to the modern era. These master creators have contributed to one of the world's most significant art collections, representing diverse periods, styles, and artistic movements.
Ancient Roman sculptor
A significant artist in the Vatican Museums collection.
Raphael
Summoned by Popes Julius II and Leo X, Raphael directed the decoration of the Stanze and designed tapestry cartoons for the Sistine Chapel; these commissions anchor his presence throughout the Vatican Museums and define papal High Renaissance taste.
Michelangelo Buonarroti
Commissioned by Popes Julius II and Paul III for the Sistine Chapel frescoes; appointed chief architect of St. Peter’s Basilica (from 1546), shaping the dome’s final design. The Sistine Ceiling, the Last Judgment, and the wooden dome model anchor his presence within the Vatican Museums and the Apostolic Palace.
Unknown Egyptian artist
Most pieces entered the Vatican via 18th–19th-century collecting and transfers to the Gregorian Egyptian Museum (founded 1839 by Pope Gregory XVI), forming a core survey of Egyptian art now on view alongside royal portraits and mummies.
Pinturicchio
A significant artist in the Vatican Museums collection.
Fra Angelico
A significant artist in the Vatican Museums collection.
Guido Reni
Reni’s altarpiece-scale canvases, once in Roman churches and collections, entered the Pinacoteca Vaticana, exemplifying papal taste for classicizing Baroque painting and the Bolognese school’s influence in Rome.
Sandro Botticelli
Worked in Rome (1481–1482) on the Sistine Chapel wall cycles for Pope Sixtus IV; his two large frescoes remain a cornerstone of the chapel’s narrative register.
Giotto di Bondone
A significant artist in the Vatican Museums collection.
Melozzo da Forlì
Worked for the papal court; surviving fragments of his Vatican Library frescoes and music-making angels are key holdings of the Pinacoteca Vaticana.
Giorgio Vasari
Active at the papal court in the later 16th century; his chapel frescoes and altarpiece in the Vatican Museums exemplify Medici-connected Mannerism within the Apostolic Palace context.
Antonio Canova
After Napoleonic spoliations, Canova’s “Perseus” stood as a symbolic replacement for the Apollo Belvedere; his papal portraiture and diplomacy cemented his stature in the Vatican Museums’ Pio-Clementino galleries.
Gian Lorenzo Bernini
Principal artist of 17th-century papal Rome; created the Baldacchino and Cathedra Petri in St. Peter’s and designed the piazza colonnades. In the Vatican Museums, portraits (e.g., Bust of Urban VIII) and self-portraits reflect his close ties to Barberini patronage and the papal court.
Francesco Podesti
Commissioned by Pope Pius IX to fresco the Room of the Immaculate Conception in the Apostolic Palace, Podesti designed and executed the cycle (1849–1864) culminating in the scene of the 1854 proclamation—his signature Vatican work.
Agesander, Athenodoros, and Polydorus of Rhodes
Laocoön and His Sons has stood at the heart of the Pio-Clementino collections since its discovery and papal acquisition; its installation in the Belvedere set the model for the Vatican’s display of antiquities.
Leochares
A significant artist in the Vatican Museums collection.
Leonardo da Vinci
The Pinacoteca Vaticana preserves St. Jerome in the Wilderness, a cornerstone of Leonardo studies; Leonardo also worked in Rome under papal patronage (1513–1516), linking his late career to the Apostolic Palace.
Caravaggio
A significant artist in the Vatican Museums collection.
Nicolas Poussin
Painted for St. Peter’s Basilica and later transferred to the Pinacoteca Vaticana, Poussin’s “Martyrdom of Saint Erasmus” anchors the Vatican’s Baroque classicist holdings and reflects Rome’s 17th-century artistic milieu.
Arnaldo Pomodoro
Installed in 1990 in the Cortile della Pigna, Pomodoro’s “Sphere within Sphere” brings late-20th-century sculpture into dialogue with Vatican architecture and gardens, serving as one of the Museums’ most recognizable modern interventions.
Roman weavers (17th century, after Rubens)
Woven in Rome after Rubens’s models and preserved in the Vatican Museums, these tapestries reflect papal patronage of Baroque decorative arts and the cross-European exchange of designs via cartoons.
Titian
A significant artist in the Vatican Museums collection.
Nicolaus and Johannes
Their “Last Judgement” panel is a key document in the Vatican Pinacoteca’s early rooms, bridging Byzantine-inflected sacred imagery and the naturalism that follows in early Renaissance painting.
Carlo Crivelli
Crivelli’s panels in the Pinacoteca Vaticana show the refined tempera-and-gold technique prized in papal territories during the 15th century, complementing Florentine and Umbrian currents elsewhere in the collection.
Pietro Perugino
Perugino worked on papal commissions in Rome around the Sistine Chapel era; in the Pinacoteca Vaticana his “Madonna and Child with Saints Laurence, Louis of Toulouse, Herculanus and Constantius” anchors the Umbrian strand within the collection.
Federico Barocci
Barocci’s works in the Pinacoteca Vaticana reflect papal taste for warm, persuasive Counter-Reformation imagery; his admired color and grace enriched the Vatican collection’s transition from Renaissance clarity to Baroque feeling.
Donato Creti
Commissioned in 1711 by Count Luigi Ferdinando Marsili and presented to Pope Clement XI, Creti’s planetary panels in the Pinacoteca Vaticana advocated papal support for astronomical research, helping spur the founding of Bologna’s observatory.
Wenzel Peter
Peter’s large animal pieces were acquired for the Papal Palaces under Pius VII; today the Pinacoteca Vaticana displays “Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden” as the signature work of his Roman career.
After Lysippos
The Vatican “Apoxyomenos” is among the most important Roman reflections of Lysippos’ innovations, preserved in the Pio-Clementino Museum where it illustrates the transmission of Greek aesthetics through Roman copies.
Apollonius of Athens
The Belvedere Torso is a cornerstone of the Pio-Clementino Museum; its study shaped Michelangelo’s Sistine figures, making Apollonius’ fragment one of the Vatican Museums’ most historically influential marbles.
Exekias
Exemplary black-figure vases by or after Exekias are highlights of the Gregorian Etruscan Museum’s Greek Vase Room, anchoring its display of classical ceramics.
Douris
Greek vases by Douris in the Gregorian Etruscan Museum exemplify the height of Classical Athenian ceramic painting and anchor the collection’s survey of red-figure technique.
Berlin Painter
Works attributed to the Berlin Painter in the Gregorian Etruscan Museum anchor the collection’s survey of Classical Athenian vase-painting and its export to Italy.
Achilles Painter
Represented in the Gregorian Etruscan Museum by red-figure vessels, the Achilles Painter links the Vatican’s holdings to the pinnacle of classical Athenian pottery.
Painter of the Boston Phiale
The Gregorian Etruscan Museum preserves Attic vases attributed to the Boston Phiale Painter, illustrating Classical Athenian pottery prized by papal collectors and antiquarians in Rome.
New Wing
Opened in 1822 for classical sculpture and refurbished in the 21st century, the Braccio Nuovo remains a signature setting for Roman statuary—hence occasional credit lines using its name in object records.
Phidias
A significant artist in the Vatican Museums collection.
Herakleitos
A significant artist in the Vatican Museums collection.
Tiwi artists (Australia)
Pukumani posts in the Ethnological Museum (Anima Mundi) entered the Vatican collections through 20th-century cultural exchanges, representing living Tiwi traditions within the Museums’ global holdings.
Roman workshop (19th century)
Built for papal processions and court display, the Grand Gala Berlin is preserved in the Carriage Pavilion of the Vatican Museums, documenting 19th-century papal ceremonial and Roman craftsmanship.
Citroën
A significant artist in the Vatican Museums collection.
Byzantine artisan
A significant artist in the Vatican Museums collection.
Vincent van Gogh
The Vatican Museums hold his 1889 painting *La Pietà* (after Delacroix) in the Collection of Modern Art, presenting Van Gogh’s devotional expression within a Catholic context.
Gino Bonichi
A significant artist in the Vatican Museums collection.
Marino Marini
The Vatican Museums’ Collection of Modern Art includes Marini’s bronze *Il Cavaliere (Horse and Rider)*, representing the museum’s dialogue with leading twentieth-century Italian sculpture.
Henri Matisse
In the Vatican Museums’ Collection of Modern Art, Matisse is represented by *La Vierge à l'Enfant (Virgin and Child)*, signaling the Vatican’s engagement with twentieth-century masters and modern sacred imagery.
James Ensor
Ensor’s Procession painting entered the Vatican’s Collection of Modern Art as part of the 20th-century papal initiative to dialogue with modernism, placing a leading Belgian innovator alongside religious themes in a museum context.
Marc Chagall
Chagall’s presence in the Vatican’s Collection of Modern Art underscores the museum’s 20th-century engagement with contemporary masters whose biblical works converse with tradition beyond strict academic styles.
Carlo Carrà
Carrà’s work entered the Vatican’s Collection of Modern Art as part of the 20th-century papal initiative to engage modern painting with sacred themes, placing a key Italian modernist in dialogue with biblical narrative.
Alberto Burri
Acquired for the Vatican’s Collection of Modern Art to reflect postwar Italian innovation, Burri’s work embodies the museum’s dialogue with contemporary abstraction and the spiritual resonance of raw materials.
Salvador Dalí
Dalí’s painting entered the Vatican’s Collection of Modern Art as part of its modernist outreach, demonstrating how Surrealist language could illuminate biblical subjects within a Catholic museum context.
Francis Bacon
Bacon’s “Study for Velázquez’s Pope Innocent X (Study for Pope II)” brings a major postwar voice into the Vatican’s Modern Art Collection, reframing a canonical papal image for the 20th century.
Manufacture Nationale de Sèvres
A Sèvres presentation vase entered the Vatican as a high-level diplomatic gift, exemplifying how European courts used porcelain to signal prestige and cultural exchange.
Paolo Troubetzkoy
A significant artist in the Vatican Museums collection.
Donato Bramante
As Julius II’s chief architect, Bramante launched the rebuilding of St. Peter’s and reshaped the Apostolic Palace; the original Bramante Staircase survives as a signature feat of Renaissance engineering in the Vatican.
Vatican Mosaic Studio
A significant artist in the Vatican Museums collection.
Auguste Rodin
The Vatican Museums present a bronze cast of The Thinker within the Collection of Modern and Contemporary Art, signaling the papal embrace of modern sculpture alongside the classical canon.
Georges Rouault
The Vatican Museums’ Collection of Modern and Contemporary Art includes Rouault’s religious paintings, such as a Head of Christ, exemplifying the dialogue between modern expression and Christian iconography fostered after the Second Vatican Council.
Emil Nolde
The Vatican Museums hold Nolde’s Pentecost, positioning Expressionist spirituality within the Collection of Modern and Contemporary Art and reflecting the Church’s engagement with modern visual languages.
Paul Klee
Included in the Vatican Museums’ modern collection inaugurated under Pope Paul VI, Klee’s work exemplifies the museum’s outreach to 20th-century art within a religious setting.
Jan Matejko
Matejko presented “Sobieski at Vienna” to Pope Leo XIII in 1883 for the battle’s bicentenary; it hangs in the Sobieski Room and ranks among the largest 19th-century paintings in the Vatican Museums.
Paul Gauguin
The Vatican Museums hold his carved and painted relief “Soyez amoureuses, vous serez heureuses,” spotlighting modern sacred-secular tensions within the Collection of Modern Art.
Maurice Denis
The Vatican Museums’ “Nazareth (Holy Family)” represents Denis’s synthesis of avant-garde form and faith, anchoring the Modern Art Collection’s early 20th-century sacred revival.
Medardo Rosso
In the Vatican Museums, “Aetas Aurea (The Golden Age)” shows Rosso’s wax over plaster technique, demonstrating how modern sculpture could evoke spiritual states through light and ephemerality.
Domenichino
A significant artist in the Vatican Museums collection.
Carlo Maratta
In the Pinacoteca Vaticana his “Immaculate Conception” exemplifies Roman classicism in papal collections, reflecting Maratta’s long service to the Holy See and the devotional image culture of the Baroque.
Andrea Sacchi
The Pinacoteca Vaticana’s “Vision of Saint Romuald” shows Sacchi’s refined narrative economy within a papal context, marking a key chapter in 17th-century Roman classicism housed by the Vatican Museums.
Lucio Fontana
The Vatican Museums hold his glazed ceramic “Crucifixion,” aligning Fontana’s experimental materials with religious subject matter and expanding the Modern Art Collection’s dialogue between faith and avant-garde form.
Chartres Atelier (after Van Gogh)
In the Vatican Museums’ Collection of Modern Art, the atelier is represented by a wool tapestry after Vincent van Gogh’s “The Good Samaritan,” a postwar commission that adapts the Dutch master’s impasto and drama to the liturgical scale of woven textile.
Francesco Jacovacci
The Vatican Museums preserve his portraits of Pope Leo XIII, aligning Jacovacci’s salon finish with the papal image-making of the late 19th century.