<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<rdf:RDF xmlns:schema="https://schema.org/" xmlns:rdf="https://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#"><schema:ItemList><schema:numberOfItems>11</schema:numberOfItems><schema:itemListElement><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/94301/full</schema:image><schema:name>Portrait of the Artist's Wife, Edith Schiele</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>1918</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Egon Schiele]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Egon Schiele</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Oil on canvas</schema:artMedium><schema:description>“One evening Schiele was invited with his wife. She was completely obscured by her tousled blonde hair and a shy hesitancy,” wrote a friend of the artist’s about the young couple. They had married in 1915; three years later the Expressionist artist painted his wife with a highly sensitive gaze. It would be the first of his paintings to be acquired by a museum. But in the eyes of the then Director of the Belvedere (called the Österreichische Staatsgalerie at the time) it was too “arts-and-crafts” and vivid, whereupon Schiele reworked Edith’s dress in more muted hues. Technical analysis of the painting in 2018 brought this original version to light. This has been reconstructed and is shown here beside the final version of the painting.</schema:description><schema:artForm>Painting</schema:artForm><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/1029/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></schema:itemListElement><schema:itemListElement><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/94715/full</schema:image><schema:name>Victor Ritter von Bauer</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>1918</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Egon Schiele]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Egon Schiele</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Oil on canvas</schema:artMedium><schema:artForm>Painting</schema:artForm><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/1955/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></schema:itemListElement><schema:itemListElement><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/94719/full</schema:image><schema:name>Squatting Couple (The Family)</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>1918</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Egon Schiele]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Egon Schiele</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Oil on canvas</schema:artMedium><schema:description>A man and a woman, both nude, are crouching in a dark room. A child peers out from between the woman’s legs. Positioned protectively behind them both, the man with alert eyes reveals Schiele’s features. His bony body contrasts with the woman’s soft curves, who looks down, lost in thought. Despite their physical proximity, the two bodies appear isolated. Schiele’s own family would never come into existence. His wife Edith died of Spanish flu on October 28, 1918, when she was six months pregnant. Egon Schiele died three days later. Art critic Berta Zuckerkandl thereupon first used the title “The Family” for Squatting Couple.</schema:description><schema:artForm>Painting</schema:artForm><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/3071/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></schema:itemListElement><schema:itemListElement><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/94305/full</schema:image><schema:name>Dr. Hugo Koller</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>1918</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Egon Schiele]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Egon Schiele</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Oil on canvas</schema:artMedium><schema:description>Dr. Hugo Koller (geb. 1868) war Arzt und Physiker. Seine Frau war die Malerin Broncia Koller-Pinell (1863-1934).</schema:description><schema:artForm>Painting</schema:artForm><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/3090/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></schema:itemListElement><schema:itemListElement><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/28578/full</schema:image><schema:name>The Artist's Wife, Seated</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>1917</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Egon Schiele]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Egon Schiele</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Gouache on paper</schema:artMedium><schema:artForm>Drawing art</schema:artForm><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/1001/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></schema:itemListElement><schema:itemListElement><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/4121/full</schema:image><schema:name>Portrait of Dr. Franz Martin Haberditzl</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>1917</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Egon Schiele]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Egon Schiele</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Oil on canvas</schema:artMedium><schema:description>Der Kunsthistoriker Prof. Dr. Franz Martin Haberditzl (1882–1944) war von 1915 bis 1938 Direktor der Österreichischen Galerie.</schema:description><schema:artForm>Painting</schema:artForm><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/10519/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></schema:itemListElement><schema:itemListElement><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/9233/full</schema:image><schema:name>Self-Portrait</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>1916/1918 (recast: 1980)</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Egon Schiele]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Egon Schiele</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Bronze</schema:artMedium><schema:artForm>Sculpture</schema:artForm><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/5143/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></schema:itemListElement><schema:itemListElement><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/94289/full</schema:image><schema:name>Russian Prisoner of War</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>1915</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Egon Schiele]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Egon Schiele</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Gouache and pencil on paper</schema:artMedium><schema:artForm>Drawing art</schema:artForm><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/1003/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></schema:itemListElement><schema:itemListElement><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/84004/full</schema:image><schema:name>Death and Maiden</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>1915</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Egon Schiele]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Egon Schiele</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Oil on canvas</schema:artMedium><schema:description>Mortality and death are existential themes that Schiele ventured to address time and again—here associated with a biographical event. It shows a couple, the young woman clinging with both arms to her lover. The man, a self-portrait of Schiele, stares into space. The fragile balance—the artist is alluding to this in the figures’ unstable poses—seems as if it could shatter at any moment. The girl is his long-term partner and model Wally Neuzil. He had split up with her to marry Edith Harms, who was from a middle-class family. After their separation, Neuzil trained as a nurse. In 1917 she died of scarlet fever during her wartime deployment.</schema:description><schema:artForm>Painting</schema:artForm><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/1968/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></schema:itemListElement><schema:itemListElement><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/4830/full</schema:image><schema:name>The Reiner Boy (Portrait of Herbert Reiner)</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>1910</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Egon Schiele]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Egon Schiele</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Oil on canvas</schema:artMedium><schema:description>
In 1910 the renowned orthopedic specialist Max Reiner commissioned a portrait of his five-year-old son Herbert from the young painter Egon Schiele. The artist depicted him in front of a blank surface and wearing a red garment that envelops him like a loose cloak. There are no objects to indicate the child’s age. Rather, his strikingly coarse hands appear much older than the sitter himself and contrast with the boy’s radiant, innocent gaze. Schiele painted The Reiner Boy together with a series of portraits that are all in a square format and share similar compositions. </schema:description><schema:artForm>Painting</schema:artForm><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/3521/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></schema:itemListElement><schema:itemListElement><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/94300/full</schema:image><schema:name>Eduard Kosmack</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>1910</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Egon Schiele]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Egon Schiele</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Oil on canvas</schema:artMedium><schema:description>The sitter is like a hypnotist casting his spell over us. Beneath an extremely high forehead, his penetrating gaze hits us full on. Kosmack’s bony hands and the arms pressed close to his body emphasize his withdrawn character. All that interrupts the strict symmetry of the portrait is the sunflower on the right. The figure of the publisher contrasts powerfully with the light background, its flat, planar character still closely resembling the art of the Vienna Secession. Yet Schiele’s expressive style is already visible here: gestures, body language, and facial expressions are now the principal elements of his portraits. The body has been transformed into a vehicle of human emotions.</schema:description><schema:artForm>Painting</schema:artForm><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/3456/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></schema:itemListElement></schema:ItemList></rdf:RDF>