<?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>17</schema:numberOfItems><schema:itemListElement><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/95463/full</schema:image><schema:name>Still Life with Apples</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>1932</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Alfred Wickenburg]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Alfred Wickenburg</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Oil on canvas</schema:artMedium><schema:artForm>Painting</schema:artForm><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/2026/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></schema:itemListElement><schema:itemListElement><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/11988/full</schema:image><schema:name>Still Life with Grapes, Lemons and Tomatoes</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>before 1932</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Robin Christian Andersen]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Robin Christian Andersen</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Oil on canvas</schema:artMedium><schema:artForm>Painting</schema:artForm><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/2027/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></schema:itemListElement><schema:itemListElement><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/25284/full</schema:image><schema:name>Still Life with Guinea Fowl</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>1929</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Herbert Boeckl]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Herbert Boeckl</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Oil on canvas</schema:artMedium><schema:artForm>Painting</schema:artForm><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/8680/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></schema:itemListElement><schema:itemListElement><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/19312/full</schema:image><schema:name>Still Life (Interior)</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>1914</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Fritz Zerritsch der Jüngere]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Fritz Zerritsch der Jüngere</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Oil on canvas</schema:artMedium><schema:artForm>Painting</schema:artForm><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/695/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></schema:itemListElement><schema:itemListElement><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/3517/full</schema:image><schema:name>Still Life with Mutton and Haycinth</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>1910</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Oskar Kokoschka]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Oskar Kokoschka</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Oil on canvas</schema:artMedium><schema:description>The artist a “mangy creature,” his pictures “repugnant buboes reeking of a foul smell.” It was above all Kokoschka’s wild, expressive style of painting that prompted art critics to man the barricades. And they were also appalled by his crude scratches into the oil paint and his experimental approach to traditional and religious themes. This still life was painted following an Easter invitation to the house of Dr. Oskar Reichel, an internist and collector. It shows a dead sheep, a tortoise, a mouse, and an amphibian, and a mysteriously shining hyacinth, all found at the collector’s home. Kokoschka grouped them into a haphazard arrangement of novel symbols of transience and redemption.</schema:description><schema:artForm>Painting</schema:artForm><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/8158/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></schema:itemListElement><schema:itemListElement><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/19795/full</schema:image><schema:name>Still Life</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>1908</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Alois Hänisch]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Alois Hänisch</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Oil on canvas</schema:artMedium><schema:artForm>Painting</schema:artForm><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/769/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></schema:itemListElement><schema:itemListElement><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/19440/full</schema:image><schema:name>Hl. Georg im Bayerischen Nationalmuseum München</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>1905</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Rudolf Nissl]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Rudolf Nissl</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Oil on canvas</schema:artMedium><schema:description>Der Münchner Maler Rudolf Nissl war Vollmitglied der Münchner und der Wiener Secession. Das Bild war bereits auf der 2. Ausstellung des Deutschen Künstlerbundes in Berlin 1905 ausgestellt und wurde im folgenden Frühjahr auf der 26. Ausstellung der Wiener Secession für die Moderne Galerie erworben.</schema:description><schema:artForm>Painting</schema:artForm><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/6507/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></schema:itemListElement><schema:itemListElement><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/13179/full</schema:image><schema:name>Still Life with Japanese Works of Art</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>1888</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Max Schödl]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Max Schödl</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Oil on canvas</schema:artMedium><schema:artForm>Painting</schema:artForm><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/2362/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></schema:itemListElement><schema:itemListElement><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/19817/full</schema:image><schema:name>Still Life</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>1859</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Josef Neugebauer]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Josef Neugebauer</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Oil on canvas</schema:artMedium><schema:artForm>Painting</schema:artForm><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/8344/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></schema:itemListElement><schema:itemListElement><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/12154/full</schema:image><schema:name>Peasant Room with Still Life</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>undated</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Anton Schrödl]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Anton Schrödl</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Oil on wood</schema:artMedium><schema:artForm>Painting</schema:artForm><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/6552/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></schema:itemListElement><schema:itemListElement><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/113703/full</schema:image><schema:name>Still Life with Fruit, Flowers, and a Silver Cup</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>1839</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Oil on wood</schema:artMedium><schema:description>Waldmüller zeigt in seinen Blumenbildern fast ausnahmslos Pflanzen aus heimischen Gärten, hier kombiniert mit Früchten, darunter eine Ananas und Feigen, die in Treibhäusern gezogen wurden. Sein malerisches Können wird nicht nur in der Darstellung des prachtvollen Jagdpokals deutlich, sondern auch im Detail. Dies gilt für die leicht verzogene Falte des Tischtuchs ebenso wie für den fein ziselierten Griff des Messers. Im Hintergrund ist schemenhaft Rubens’ Gemälde Das Bacchanal aus der Gemäldegalerie der Wiener Akademie der Künste zu erkennen. Waldmüller war Erster Kustos (Direktor) der Galerie, in der er ab 1836 Privatunterricht erteilte, was ihm aber bereits nach wenigen Jahren verboten wurde. </schema:description><schema:artForm>Painting</schema:artForm><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/6642/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></schema:itemListElement><schema:itemListElement><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/113715/full</schema:image><schema:name>Still Life with Flowers</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>c. 1838</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Franz Xaver Gruber]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Franz Xaver Gruber</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Oil on canvas</schema:artMedium><schema:description>In the Biedermeier period, flower painters usually composed their pictures according to the same principles. The bouquet is inscribed in an oval and unfurls before a background that was almost always neutral. Arranged at the center are the more beautiful and magnificent flowers, where the most light falls on them. Smaller or more inconspicuous blooms are placed at the edges and hence in the shade. In front of this arrangement some flowers seem to have fallen out of the vase (but they are as artfully arranged as the bouquet). They extend beyond the edge of the table or the ledge on which the vase stands. Domestic or exotic fruits, birds and other animals sometimes enrich these floral compositions.</schema:description><schema:artForm>Painting</schema:artForm><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/1840/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></schema:itemListElement><schema:itemListElement><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/113713/full</schema:image><schema:name>Roses in a Glass</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>1831</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Oil on wood</schema:artMedium><schema:description>Waldmüller was one of the first artists to move away from the “Dutch” models of the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. He has depicted only one type of flower—roses. Captured from bud to wilting bloom, his bouquet becomes a symbol of life itself. An extinguished candle and discarded jewelry add further associations of parting and death, emphasized by the prayer book and myrtle sprig. The candleholder, box, and cup form a small group in themselves. They reflect both each other and their painted “real” surroundings: The corner of a room with a large, almost floor-to-ceiling wardrobe can be seen in various reflections.</schema:description><schema:artForm>Painting</schema:artForm><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/8132/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></schema:itemListElement><schema:itemListElement><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/163545/full</schema:image><schema:name>Bouquet of Flowers</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>before 1838</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Josef Nigg]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Josef Nigg</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Oil on canvas</schema:artMedium><schema:artForm>Painting</schema:artForm><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/2427/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></schema:itemListElement><schema:itemListElement><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/16081/full</schema:image><schema:name>Still Life with Goldfish Bowl</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>1810</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Johann Knapp]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Johann Knapp</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Oil on canvas</schema:artMedium><schema:artForm>Painting</schema:artForm><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/2503/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></schema:itemListElement><schema:itemListElement><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/113716/full</schema:image><schema:name>Still Life with Flowers</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>1786</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Johann Baptist Drechsler]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Johann Baptist Drechsler</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Oil on wood</schema:artMedium><schema:artForm>Painting</schema:artForm><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/1940/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></schema:itemListElement><schema:itemListElement><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/17977/full</schema:image><schema:name>Landscape with Reptiles and Insects (I)</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>c. 1730/1740</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Johann Adalbert Angermayer]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Johann Adalbert Angermayer</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Oil on canvas</schema:artMedium><schema:description>Dieses Gemälde und sein Pendant (Inv.-Nr. 1454) bilden eine Schnittstelle zwischen Stillleben- und Landschaftsmalerei und sind für das letzte Lebensjahrzehnt von Johann Adalbert Angermayer charakteristisch. Unter den überaus präzise wiedergegebenen Tieren sind neben anderen eine Zauneidechse, eine Ringelnatter sowie verschiedene Schmetterlinge – Segelfalter, Kleiner Fuchs, Kohlweißling, Bläuling und Kiefernschwärmer – zu erkennen. — [Georg Lechner 5/2010]</schema:description><schema:artForm>Painting</schema:artForm><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/465/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></schema:itemListElement></schema:ItemList></rdf:RDF>