Rafał Hadziewicz
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Rafał Hadziewicz (13 October 1803 - 7 September 1883) was a Polish historical painter.
Born in Zamch, he attended art school from 1816 to 1822. In 1822 he studied at Warsaw University under Antoni Brodowski. After getting a scholarship he travelled to Dresden in 1829 and later for Paris where he studied at a prominent French School of Painting. In 1831 he continued his studies in Rome. He stayed in Rome in 1833 for self-study of the masters. At this time he created many well-received sketches. In 1834 he went to Kraków and painted several icons for several Orthodox churches there. In 1839 he left for Moscow, where he served in the Department of Fine Art and Mathematics until 1844. In 1844 he moved back to Warsaw where he served as a professor in the Warsaw School of Art. In 1871, near the end of his life, he was transmitted to a university in Kielce, where he died. Hadziewicz painted numerous religious paintings and portraits but he was best known his historic compositions too, which were often compared to the art of the Italian Renaissance and European Baroque.