A prominent place in T. Baracz's oeuvre is occupied by portraits of representatives of Lviv's nobility and intellectual and creative circles who visited the sculptor's studio in the Krakow Hotel on Bernardynska Square (now Soborna Square), which became a popular literary and artistic social salon in the city. T. Baracz became famous as a portraitist for the expressiveness and representativeness of his portraits, the speed of their execution, and the skilful reproduction of individual features. Among the female portraits created by the master is a portrait of Countess Felicia Comello, daughter of Count Tadeusz Turkul – the owner of the first neo-Gothic palace at 50a Pekarska Street in Lviv. In contrast to later, more refined and organic female portraits, this one is somewhat static, emphatically representative, and excessively detailed, with a careful reproduction of a luxurious dress with a décolleté, a decorative bouquet and hairstyle, characterised by idealisation and levelling of age-related features. Her aristocratic origins are indicated by a straight posture, calm self-confidence and self-respect, in keeping with the principle of "noblesse oblige".