{"object":[{"sourceId":{"label":"Source ID","value":"898"},"invno":{"label":"Inventory number","value":"1876"},"description":{"label":"Description","value":"With this small plaster sculpture, Hanns Gasser turned to a tragic episode in the life of his friend, the painter Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld. In 1846, Schnorr\u2019s daughter Franca, one of the family\u2019s six children, died of typhus at just sixteen. Gasser imagines this loss as a symbolic scene of farewell, placing the deceased Franca at its center. With her gaze lowered and her posture turned inward, she appears to withdraw, as though quietly taking leave of her sisters Marie (1831\u20131919) and Emilie (1832\u20131864), who remain closely attached to her. The three brothers are notably absent. Rendering such a personal subject as a genre-like, symbolic tableau is highly unusual. Other artists also responded to the girl\u2019s untimely death; unlike Gasser, however, Friedrich Olivier and Gustav Jäger chose to depict her on her deathbed."},"medium":{"label":"Medium","value":"Plaster"},"onview":{"label":"On View","value":"0"},"media":{"label":"Media","value":["https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/internal/media/dispatcher/162743/full"]},"title":{"label":"Title","value":"Heartbreak (The Three Daughters of Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld)"},"classification":{"label":"Genre","value":"Sculpture"},"primaryMedia":{"label":"PrimaryMedia","value":"https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/internal/media/dispatcher/162741/full"},"displayDate":{"label":"Date","value":"1845/1846"},"id":{"label":"Id","value":"11459405"},"iiifManifest":{"value":"https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/apis/iiif/presentation/v2/1-objects-898/manifest"},"dimensions":{"label":"Dimensions","value":"(Vitrine): 38 × 28 × 16,5 cm"}}]}