On 23 June 2021, the painting was sold at a small auction house in Shropshire with an estimate of £2000–4000. There was a fierce bidding war due to the inherent sociological interest of the allegorical depiction of a dark-skinned woman, and the final
hammer price was £220,000, before the 20% buyer's premium. It was the highest sum ever paid for an item at the Shropshire auction house. The British government subsequently barred the painting from export in the hopes that a UK institution could purchase the painting within a time limit, a routine action intended to prevent overseas buyers from acquiring culturally important artworks. On 23 June 2023,
The Guardian reported that the painting had been "saved" for Britain by
Compton Verney Art Gallery for £300,000, with the help of grants from the
National Heritage Memorial Fund and the
Victoria and Albert Museum valued at £154,600 and £50,000 respectively. ==References==