According to older literature, the statue of St Stephen originates from the high altar of the church in Štepanja vas in Ljubljana, where it stood in the central niche. Since the statues on the side altars which, together with Jelovšek's paintings harmoniously complement the theatrical Baroque furnishings of the Štepanja vas church, are attributed to the Ljubljana sculptor Henrik Mihael Löhr, we can reasonably assume that the statue of St Stephen is also by Löhr's hand.
The high altar, which was also made according to Jelovšek's plans, was replaced in 1889 with an altar by Feliks Toman, and the painting The Martyrdom of St. Stephen by Jurij Šubic (1890) replaced the statue of St Stephen attributed to Löhr. Of the original design of the high altar, only Jelovšek's painted architectural scenery and St Stephen, now in the collection of the National Gallery, have been preserved to this day.
The sculptor designed the statue of St Stephen, the first Christian martyr and patron saint of stonemasons and horses, in a dynamic pose, with outstretched arms and an upturned gaze, thereby linking the content of the statue to the iconography of the saint's assumption, the scene Jelovšek depicted on the vault of the presbytery.