{"object":[{"sourceId":{"label":"Source ID","value":"1992"},"primaryMedia":{"label":"PrimaryMedia","value":"/internal/media/dispatcher/4771/full"},"displayDate":{"label":"Date","value":"1823"},"invno":{"label":"Inventory number","value":"3195"},"description":{"label":"Description","value":"We see here a young nobleman who is in the service of a knight. Gazing into the distance, the squire is cutting a slice from his large loaf of bread. His sword is beside him; his clothes\u2014especially the slashed doublet and his shoes\u2014point to the sixteenth century. They are as \u201cold German\u201d as the landscape with the gently flowing river, the village, and the Gothic church in the distance. Schwind was a key exponent of the nineteenth-century vogue for the romance of knights and castles. Known primarily for his fairy-tale images, he often romanticized the \u201cgood old days.\u201d The past thus became an idyllic retreat from the present and its rationalism, which the painter experienced as increasingly cold and inadequate."},"medium":{"label":"Medium","value":"Oil on canvas"},"onview":{"label":"On View","value":"0"},"id":{"label":"Id","value":"10192436"},"title":{"label":"Title","value":"The Bread Cutter"},"classification":{"label":"Genre","value":"Painting"},"iiifManifest":{"value":"https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/apis/iiif/presentation/v2/1-objects-1992/manifest"},"dimensions":{"label":"Dimensions","value":"49 x 64 cm"}}]}