{"object":[{"sourceId":{"label":"Source ID","value":"3196"},"locationssite":{"label":"Location","value":"Upper Belvedere"},"invno":{"label":"Inventory number","value":"4402"},"description":{"label":"Description","value":"Klimt rarely engaged with biblical subjects during his career. One of his last works, unfinished at his death, shows the first humans, Adam and Eve. He was not interested in the more traditional depiction of the Fall, however, instead focusing on the figure of Eve as the quintessential female. Adam has closed his eyes, intoxicated with love, as he tilts his head and nestles tenderly against Eve. But Eve is looking straight at us. The anemones on the ground are emblems of fertility; the leopard skin, meanwhile, was a symbol in ancient Greece of unbridled desire. In Klimt\u2019s interpretation, then, it is Eve\u2014and not the snake\u2014who is the temptress."},"medium":{"label":"Medium","value":"Oil on canvas (unfinished)"},"onview":{"label":"On View","value":"1"},"title":{"label":"Title","value":"Adam and Eve"},"classification":{"label":"Genre","value":"Painting"},"primaryMedia":{"label":"PrimaryMedia","value":"/internal/media/dispatcher/160537/full"},"displayDate":{"label":"Date","value":"1916 - 1918"},"id":{"label":"Id","value":"10193250"},"iiifManifest":{"value":"https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/apis/iiif/presentation/v2/1-objects-3196/manifest"},"dimensions":{"label":"Dimensions","value":"173 × 60 cm"}}]}