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Three Boys
Three Boys
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Three Boys

by Bartolomé Esteban Murillo

Date: c.1670

Currently on display

in Room 1

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Item details
  • Acquisition

    Bourgeois Bequest, 1811

  • Accession number

    DPG222

  • Artist

    Bartolomé Estéban Murillo

  • Date

    c.1670

  • Dimensions

    168.3 x 109.8 cm

  • Materials

    Oil on canvas

  • Notes

    Adopted by Allied-Lyons Plc, 1992

The Spanish painter Bartolomé Esteban Murillo (1617-82) depicts a seated pair of impoverished children who are about to commence a humble meal. The right-hand child closely guards a pie, covering it with an outstretched hand. Their clothes are dirty, torn and ill-fitting, and their feet are shoeless and soiled. In his brown cropped jacket and sturdy, laced shoes, the standing figure is relatively well-dressed. He has perhaps just filled the children’s small ceramic water jug, laid out in the foreground, and extends his hand to receive payment, or perhaps a slice of pie. With an unsettling grin, the left-hand child furtively reaches into the standing boy’s pocket in search of coins. By the nineteenth century, the painting's historic title – 'The Poor Black Boy’ – implied that the standing boy was begging for charity, according to racialised tropes of the time. However, it is the seated boys who may have resorted to stealing the pie and who are in fact seeking charity. Recent research has proposed that the standing figure is likely a water-seller of African heritage – either enslaved or freed. Water-selling was a common trade on the streets of seventeenth-century Seville.

Murillo would have encountered people of many different heritages during day-to-day life in that city and, in the complex multiracial world of the Spanish Empire, enslavement was common. It has often been thought that the model for the standing figure was an enslaved child in Murillo’s own household, Tomás de Santiago – who would have been around fourteen when this painting was made. Tomás was the son of Juana de Santiago (b. 1658), whom Murillo later freed in 1676. It has been suggested that the seated boys are based on Murillo's own sons, Gabriel (b.1657) and Gaspar (b.1661).

Three Boys

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