Bartolomé
Esteban Murillo was born in 1617 in Seville. He was the
youngest of fourteen children of a Sevillian barber, Gaspar Esteban, and
his wife Maria Peres. In 1627, his father died, a year later he lost his
mother. Murillo's elder sisters and brothers were already grown up and
could take care of themselves, while the 10 year old Bartolomé was
adopted into the family of his aunt, married to a wealthy Sevillian
doctor.
Murillo was apprenticed early
to a painter Juan del Castillo (1584-1640). When, in 1639, Castillo left
Seville for Cadiz, Murillo did not enter any workshop of a known artist,
as it was the traditional way of all the beginners, but preferred to
stay independent. It is said that to gain a living Murillo started to
make sargas - cheap paintings on rough canvas sold at country fairs, and
shipped to America by traders. Obviously his paintings appealed to the
taste of the public, besides they revealed a certain talent of the young
man. That was why the Franciscan monastery in Seville commissioned this
unknown artist with a cycle of 11 paintings with scenes from the lives
of Franciscan saints, which, after their execution, brought Murillo
fame. The artist dated his works very seldom. The first dated canvas
belongs to the cycle for the Franciscan Monastery: one of the paintings
is dated 1646, thus the whole series is usually dated 1645-46. But some
art historians consider that the work took a longer period, of
approximately 1642-1646. The canvases of the cycle are executed in
different styles; thus some art historians consider that Cuisine of
Angels (Miracle of St. Diego de Alcada) was inspired by Rivera; Death of
St. Clara was influenced by van Dyck; and Velazquez had an effect on St.
Diego Giving Charity. Even if it is really so, no wonder, the young
artist was studying, during this long work his own style of soft forms
and warm colors was being formed.
At some point in his life,
probably in the late 1640s, Murillo is believed to have visited Madrid.
In any case, after 1650 his style changed, which might be the result of
his meeting with Velazquez and studying of the works of Titian, Rubens,
and Van Dyck in the royal collections in Madrid.
On February 26, 1645 Murillo
married Beatrice Sotomajor-i-Cabrera; soon their first daughter, named
Maria, was born (died 1650). In 1647-1654 the artist painted a lot of 'Madonnas',
small in size, the canvases were aimed for home altars: Madonna of the
Rosary, Madonna and Child.
Already in his early religious
paintings for the Franciscans Murillo widely used the genre scenes,
which soon became a separate subject in his works: The Beggar Boy
(1650), Grape and Melon Eaters. (c.1650), The Little Fruit Seller.
(c.1670-1675) etc. Today considered somewhat sentimental, his genre
scenes nevertheless represent a new way of perception. Murillo's
'children', as well as his 'Madonnas', very soon became popular not only
in Spain. Thanks to them he was the first Spanish painter to achieve
widespread European fame. To the 1650s, also belong many of his
portraits. Unfortunately, we do not know anything about the depicted
people, even when they are identified, and we know their names.
With fame and multiple
commissions the financial position of the artist became secured. It is
known that in 1657 Murillo invested big money in a trade company in the
New World, he bought slaves for his household. In 1662, he was admitted
to several religious organizations of Seville. These organizations
reminded in their structure and activities the later mason loges.
Murillo also took an active part in the social life of his city. Thus he
was one of the founders of the Academy of Fine Arts in Seville, which
was opened in 1660, with Murillo as its first president.
In January 1664, Murillo
buried his wife. Though 20 years of his life were still ahead, and
during these 20 years he would be painted 2/3 of all his known works,
Murillo would never fully recover from this blow. During 1664, he could
not work, at the end of the year he moved with all his surviving
children (Jose Esteban, aged 14, Francisca Maria, aged 9, Gabriel, aged
8, Gaspar Esteban, aged 2, and infant Maria) into the Convent of
Capuchins.
From 1665 to 1682, he painted
many of his major religious works, such as those for the Santa Maria la
Blanca (1665), of the Caridad Hospital (1670-74), of the Capuchins
(1676), of the Venerables Sacerdotes (1678), of the Augustinians (1680),
and, lastly, of the Cadiz Capuchins, together with a large number of
pictures made at different times for the Cathedral of Seville or other
churches and many devotional works for private individuals.
A legend says that the artist
died in poverty. It does contradict with the fact of many commissions he
had, more close to the truth is the version that he gave off his money
as charitable contributions to the religious organizations of which he
was the member. The story about Murillo's death sounds like a legend.
Murrilo accepted commission from the Capuchin church in Cadiz. For the
first time in his life he went to decorate another city. While working
on the Marriage of St. Catherine (1682) Murillo fell from the scaffold,
in critical condition he was brought to his native Seville, where he
soon died, on April 13, 1682. After his death he left very modest
private property, but many pupils and innumerable followers. His works
influenced later Spanish painting and anticipated 18th-century European
Rococo painting.