The Flight into Egypt (Murillo) explained

The Flight into Egypt
Artist:Bartolomé Esteban Murillo
Year:c. 1647-1650
Height Metric:209.6
Width Metric:166.4
Metric Unit:cm
Imperial Unit:in
Museum:Detroit Institute of Arts
City:Detroit

The Flight into Egypt is a 1647–1650 oil on canvas painting by Bartolomé Esteban Murillo, which since 1948 has been in the Detroit Institute of Arts.[1] It shows the flight into Egypt, a popular motif in Christian art from the 14th century onwards.[2] It first appears in the written record whilst in the collection of Sir William Chapman in London, passing through other British collections until its sale at Christie's in London in 1945. It was bought by Maurice Harris, who took it to New York and donated it to its present home later that decade.[3]

Diego Angulo's Catálogo crítico lists at least two other treatments of that subject,[4] namely the c.1660 one in the Museum of Fine Arts in Budapest and a 1645-1650 very similar but slightly larger version of the Detroit work now in the Palazzo Bianco in Genoa.[5] The Budapest version adds two small angels hovering over the scene, whilst the main figures of Joseph, Mary and the Christ Child travel in the opposite direction to the Detroit work, while the Genoa version seems to have been painted for La Merced Calzada church in Seville, where it remained until being looted in 1810 by Marshal Soult.[6]

See also

References

  1. Web site: The Flight into Egypt . 29 November 2018 . DIA online.
  2. Paris, Jean (1998). La Fuite en Égypte. Éditions du Regard. p. 30 y ss. ISBN 2-84105-001-7
  3. Cámara, Alicia (2005). «Una mirada cotidiana a al divinidad». Murillo Madrid: Arlanza. pp. 28 y 56. ISBN 8495503484.
  4. Angulo, Diego (1981). Murillo, su vida, su arte, su obra. Catálogo crítico. Madrid: Espasa Calpe. pp. 208-9 (vol. I) and 246 (vol. II).
  5. Web site: Fuga in Egitto . 29 November 2018 . museidigenova.it .
  6. VV. AA. (2010). Museo de Bellas Artes de Sevilla y Museo de Bellas Artes de Bilbao, ed. El joven Murillo. pp. 278-281. «Catálogo de la exposición».