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<rdf:RDF xmlns:schema="https://schema.org/" xmlns:rdf="https://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#"><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/158885/full</schema:image><schema:name>Head</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>1962 and 1965</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Fritz Wotruba]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Fritz Wotruba</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Carrara marble</schema:artMedium><schema:description>
Over the course of his career—from the late 1920s to 1975—Austrian sculptor Fritz Wotruba produced some fifty head sculptures, alongside figures and stage models. While in his relatively few portraits he sought to capture the individuality of his subjects, many others are conceived as anonymous, typified forms. In the 1960s, he created abstract heads aligned with the tectonic language of his work during this period. With its layered, slab-like structure, this Carrara marble head shifts, depending on light and viewpoint, between the appearance of a figure and that of architecture.</schema:description><schema:artForm>Sculpture</schema:artForm><schema:copyrightHolder>© Belvedere, Wien</schema:copyrightHolder><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/46887/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></rdf:RDF>