Four Figures on a Step explained

Four Figures on a Step is an oil on canvas painting by Bartolomé Esteban Murillo, created c. 1655-1660, now held in the Kimbell Art Museum, which bought it from the heirs of Charles Russell Feldman in 1984.[1] Possibly showing a bawd, it is rare in the artist's oeuvre and largely unprecedented in contemporary Spanish art.

Provenance

Its first recorded owner was Charles Berners Plestow of Watlington Hall in Norfolk, who owned it before 1830. It was then bought from Richard Abraham in London by Sir Charles Coote, 9th Baronet for £126, passing through the Coote family until being sold by the 13th baronet in 1923, arriving in the United States two years later.[2] [3] [4]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Four Figures on a Step | Kimbell Art Museum.
  2. Web site: Four Figures on a Step - Bartolomé Esteban Murillo. Google Arts & Culture.
  3. Web site: Masterwork on Loan - Four Figures on a Loan. 22 April 2016 . Cleveland Museum of Art.
  4. Web site: Four Figures on a Step. Artble.