Inside the Vatican studio preserving the mosaics of St. Peter's Basilica - GREEN MAG

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23.2.26

Inside the Vatican studio preserving the mosaics of St. Peter's Basilica

Inside the Vatican studio preserving the mosaics of St. Peter's Basilica

VATICAN CITY, Feb 24 (Reuters) - Since the late 1500s, a small workshop in the Vatican has cared for the hundreds of mosaics that decorate the interior of St. Peter's Basilica in a sea of colour.

Reuters A worker crafts a new mosaic inside the Vatican Mosaic Studio at the Vatican, February 19, 2026. REUTERS/Remo Casilli A worker walks along the historical coloured tiles archive inside the Vatican Mosaic Studio at the Vatican, February 19, 2026. REUTERS/Remo Casilli Boxes filled with coloured mosaic fragments and cutting tools are seen inside the Vatican Mosaic Studio at the Vatican, February 19, 2026. REUTERS/Remo Casilli A worker crafts a new mosaic inside the Vatican Mosaic Studio at the Vatican, February 19, 2026. REUTERS/Remo Casilli Paolo Di Buono, head of the Studio, poses for a photographer inside the Mosaic Studio at the Vatican, February 19, 2026. REUTERS/Remo Casilli Workers craft new mosaics inside the Vatican Mosaic Studio at the Vatican, February 19, 2026. REUTERS/Remo Casilli

Inside the Vatican studio that preserves the mosaics of St. Peter Basilica

The 12 artists on staff ‌at the Vatican Mosaic Studio also produce smaller artworks that Pope Leo uses for a kind of "mosaic diplomacy", gifting them ‌to foreign leaders visiting the Vatican or on his own trips overseas.

It can take months for the studio to create one mosaic in a slow and intensive process ​piecing together tiny coloured tiles into devotional items such as depictions of Jesus and Mary or non-religious scenes like a view of Rome's Colosseum.

"It is very important today to use the mosaic technique because we are saving the ancient tradition," Paolo Di Buono, the studio's director, told Reuters.

Their work is made to last for centuries. "We have the idea that we are working for something that (is) ... almost eternal," said Di Buono.

In the basilica, the ‌studio is responsible for 8,360 square metres (90,000 sq ⁠ft) of mosaics, including in the central dome. Mosaics were used, instead of paintings, because of the smoke produced by candles and incense during liturgies.

VATICAN MOSAICS GIVEN TO US PRESIDENTS

One of the studio's most recent productions ⁠was a portrait of the pope, installed at Rome's Basilica of St. Paul Outside the Walls.

The image, produced by a team of three people over five months, contains around 16,000 individual tiles.

"It is meticulous work because the tiles are very small," said Nicoletta Marino, one of the studio's artists. "It takes ​a ​lot of patience."

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Adriano Galise, another artist in the studio, showed photos of mosaics ​he created being given by the late Pope Benedict ‌XVI to U.S. Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama during official visits to the Vatican.

"The fact that our mosaics are used as a gift by the pope is one of the most important traditions in the Vatican," said Di Buono.

The artists in the studio have different methods for creating their works.

Galise prefers to lay out a black-and-white image with a blueprint of possible places to lay tiles, resembling the plan for a jigsaw puzzle. Others start with a coloured picture or drawing.

ARCHIVE OF 27,000 MOSAIC TILE COLOURS

The studio is an artist workshop ‌but also an historic archive. It houses a catalogue of 27,000 varieties of ​coloured tiles, stored in a 9,000-drawer filing cabinet spanning two floors.

About 23,000 of ​the tiles are artefacts - stockpiles of colours from past centuries ​that can no longer be produced and will one day be exhausted. Some of the artefacts were created ‌with poisonous materials that are no longer used today.

For the ​portrait of Leo, studio artists dipped ​into the archive to better capture the shading on the pope's face.

Inside St. Peter's Basilica, artists from the studio are restoring the mosaics in the dome of the Clementine Chapel, one of the church's oldest and most venerated spaces. It is in ​the grotto, near the tomb of St. Peter, ‌the first pope.

"We preserve the works made by our predecessors," Di Buono said of the studio's care of the ​mosaics. "We are connected in a sort of long chain, of which we are the last part."

(Reporting by Joshua McElwee; ​Additional reporting by Matteo Negri and Gabriele Pileri; Editing by Janet Lawrence)