Carl Suhrlandt Art
Carl Suhrlandt was born into a family of artists, the son of Rudolf Friedrich Carl Suhrlandt (1781–1862), a painter, lithographer and draughtsman and Wilhelmina Suhrlandt, a lithographer. He was a pupil of Ary Scheffer in Paris. From 1859–60, he worked in Copenhagen and then moved to St. Petersburg, wherein 1861, he became a member of the Academy. He finally settled in Schwerin, where he worked as a professor at the Art Academy. Most of his paintings depict animals with a preference for horses and dogs. Suhrlandt made several visits to England, where he painted similar works commissioned by the aristocracy - a typical title of this work would have been In the Kennel. Suhrlandt's work is held by the Museum in Schwerin with a piece entitled Galileo in prison.
19th Century Victorian Carl Suhrlandt Art
Oil
Mid-19th Century Victorian Carl Suhrlandt Art
Canvas, Oil
Late 19th Century Victorian Carl Suhrlandt Art
Oil
Mid-20th Century Victorian Carl Suhrlandt Art
Canvas, Oil
1850s Victorian Carl Suhrlandt Art
Wood Panel, Oil
Early 18th Century Old Masters Carl Suhrlandt Art
Oil, Canvas
2010s Realist Carl Suhrlandt Art
Oil, Wood Panel
1840s Victorian Carl Suhrlandt Art
Oil
Mid-19th Century Victorian Carl Suhrlandt Art
Oil, Canvas
19th Century Victorian Carl Suhrlandt Art
Oil
19th Century Victorian Carl Suhrlandt Art
Oil
Early 20th Century Victorian Carl Suhrlandt Art
Oil, Canvas
Mid-19th Century Victorian Carl Suhrlandt Art
Oil, Canvas