One of the most lyrical female portraits in Baracz's oeuvre is the bust of Natalia Andriollowa, born Tarnowska, a sculptor and artist, author of paintings, graphic, decorative and applied artworks, a student of W. Gerson in Warsaw, sculptors J. A. Injalbert, T. Noel and L. A. Roubaud. She was the wife of Michal Elwiro Andriolli (1836–1893), a representative of Romanticism, a graphic artist, and a famous illustrator of Polish and world literature. As in a number of other female portraits by T. Baracz from the 1890s, the means of artistic expression in this bust is a soft modelling of the face, expressed by graphic lines of the oval, hairstyle, eyebrows and eyelids. Thus, in the most plastically coherent frontal perspective, the model's dreamy, creative nature is reflected in her self-absorbed, thoughtful gaze, her shyness, the touching tenderness of her lips and her large, almond-shaped eyes. The decorative nature of the Lviv Secession is evident in the wavy strands of hair and the somewhat "salon-like" bouquet of flowers on the pedestal. At the same time, the profile and the three-quarter view reveal a plastic fragmentation that is absent in T. Baracz's later portraits from the early 1900s.