<?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/155617/full</value></field><field label="Title" name="title"><value>Still Life with Flowers</value></field><field label="Date" name="displayDate"><value>c. 1834</value></field><field label="Dimensions" name="dimensions"><value>74 x 92,8 cm</value></field><field label="Medium" name="medium"><value>Oil on canvas</value></field><field label="Inventory number" name="invno"><value>2455</value></field><field label="On View" name="onview"><value>0</value></field><field label="Description" name="description"><value>George Sand wanted this floral still life to be always in view. It was for her, France’s most famous female writer of the nineteenth century, that Delacroix painted this work. Whether it is indeed the artist’s first painting of flowers is unknown. But this does not detract from its importance as a work of art. Delacroix worked entirely with color; there are no clearly defined shapes or lines. His motivation was not botanical precision but the interplay of the colors, which he applied as contrasts, in enhancing juxtapositions, or radiant in their own right. Delacroix was thus well ahead of his time; his flower paintings and those of the Viennese Biedermeier era are poles apart. </value></field><field label="Genre" name="classification"><value>Painting</value></field><field label="Id" name="id"><value>10196296</value></field><field label="Source ID" name="sourceId"><value>8255</value></field><field name="iiifManifest"><value>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/apis/iiif/presentation/v2/1-objects-8255/manifest</value></field></object>