Carl Suhrlandt (10 July 1828, Ludwigslust - 11 February 1919, Kochel am See) was a German painter. All of his works feature animals; mostly horses.
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He came from a family of artists. His father, Rudolph Suhrlandt, was a court painter and his mother, Wilhelmine, was a lithographer. His sister, Pauline Soltau [de], was a concert violinist who also painted.
He received his first drawing lessons from his father, then studied sculpting with Christian Daniel Rauch in Berlin. In 1851, he went to Paris to study painting with Ary Scheffer. He worked in Copenhagen from 1859 to 1860, then visited St. Petersburg in 1861, where he became a member of the Imperial Academy of Fine Arts.
He then went to live in Schwerin where, in 1874, he was appointed a Professor by Frederick Francis II, Grand Duke of Mecklenburg-Schwerin. In 1898, he moved to Munich. Although he initially painted portraits and historical scenes, he eventually became a sought-after horse painter and made several visits to England in that capacity.
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