<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<object xmlns:xs="//www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"><NoAIdisclaimer>[PLATZHALTERTEXT]Vervielfältigungen eines Werkes dieser Webseite für Text- und Data-Mining und damit insbesondere für das Training einer Künstlichen Intelligenz bleibt ausdrücklich vorbehalten (§ 42h Abs 6 UrhG).</NoAIdisclaimer><field label="PrimaryMedia" name="primaryMedia"><value>/internal/media/dispatcher/50581/full</value></field><field label="Title" name="title"><value>Merrymakers in a Gondola</value></field><field label="Date" name="displayDate"><value>c. 1873/1876</value></field><field label="Dimensions" name="dimensions"><value>33,5 × 56,5 cm</value></field><field label="Medium" name="medium"><value>Oil on wood</value></field><field label="Inventory number" name="invno"><value>5405</value></field><field label="On View" name="onview"><value>0</value></field><field label="Description" name="description"><value>The gondola appears far too small to accommodate this boisterous party of seven clad in Rococo costume. But the artist is not concerned with such trivial matters. He is more interested in the charming effect of the colorful garments, arranged in sketchy dabs of color like flowers in a still life. In Merry Company in a Gondola, Romako was following in the footsteps of the greatest artist of the French Rococo, Jean-Antoine Watteau, the quintessential painter of courtly festivities in the outdoors. Romako is demonstrating his virtuosity as a painter in this celebration of the sensory intoxication of such gatherings.</value></field><field label="Genre" name="classification"><value>Painting</value></field><field label="Id" name="id"><value>10193971</value></field><field label="Source ID" name="sourceId"><value>4156</value></field><field name="iiifManifest"><value>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/apis/iiif/presentation/v2/1-objects-4156/manifest</value></field></object>