Widely considered to have expressed the most of the ideals of the High Renaissance, Raphael’s talent was truly a force to be reckoned with, and competed with his much older contemporaries Leonardo and Michelangelo. Like the other men, Raphael was trained in several disciplines to include painting as well as sculpting, and receiving a humanist education. The delicate grace with which he portrays the Madonna in the Madonna of the Chair shows a mastery of painterly skill. It shows Mary, the
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Sebastiano Serlio
Sebastiano Serlio b. Bologna, 1475; d. Fontainebleau, 1554. The first popularizer of architecture in print, author of the first architectural picture books. He went to Rome in 1514 and was a pupil probably of Raphael and certainly of Peruzzi when the latter succeeded the former as[...]
The Management Trap
[IMG][IMG ] If you chose a software career because you enjoy technical work, then you need to protect your technical edge. If your administrative tasks increase, your time to perform technical work can decrease dramatically. Because less time is spent on technical tasks and on maintaining technical skills,[...]
Seven Habits of Highly Successful Software Architects
[IMG][IMG ] Do you practice the habits of highly successful software architects? Can you deliver a solution while acting as a technical mentor, empowering others, improving the process, and developing a focused, high-performance team along the way? In Software Architect Bootcamp[IMG ], Raphael Malveau and Thomas J. Mowbray,[...]
