<?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/65358/full</value></field><field label="Title" name="title"><value>"Character Head" No. 17</value></field><field label="Alternative Title" name="title2"><value>Der Schaafkopf</value></field><field label="Date" name="displayDate"><value>1777/1783</value></field><field label="Dimensions" name="dimensions"><value>43,5 × 21 × 33 cm</value></field><field label="Medium" name="medium"><value>Brown-flecked alabaster</value></field><field label="Inventory number" name="invno"><value>5509</value></field><field label="On View" name="onview"><value>1</value></field><field label="Description" name="description"><value>The description of the “Der Schaafkopf” (The Simpleton) in “The Peculiar Life History of F.X. Messerschmidt” is far from complimentary. This 1793 account of the sculptor’s life and work describes this piece as a “simpleton,” who is stupid and deceitful, “quite useless for any business, but always busy.” However, the wide-open eyes and the furrowed brow seem more quizzical, while the tightly pressed lips may be interpreted as deliberate and amused silence. In the series of so-called “character heads,” this is the most extreme of all natural-looking busts, surpassed only by the hybrid “Beak Heads”.</value></field><field label="Genre" name="classification"><value>Sculpture</value></field><field label="Id" name="id"><value>10194037</value></field><field label="Source ID" name="sourceId"><value>4260</value></field><field label="Location" name="locationssite"><value>Upper Belvedere</value></field><field name="iiifManifest"><value>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/apis/iiif/presentation/v2/1-objects-4260/manifest</value></field></object>