Carl Schindler

Carl Vincenz Schindler (23 October 1821 in Vienna – 22 August 1842 in Laab im Walde) was an Austrian military painter in the Biedermeier style.

He received his first lessons from his father, the painter and engraver Johann Josef Schindler [de],[1] who also encouraged his interest in military subjects.

[1] It was Fendi who introduced him to the works of the French military painters, Hippolyte Bellangé, Nicolas Toussaint Charlet, Eugène Lami and Auguste Raffet.

He visited Laab im Walde, to try the "water cure", but it was to no avail and he died there at the age of twenty-one.

[2] Rather than portray battle scenes or heroic acts, he preferred to focus on the soldiers' daily lives, creating a link between military art and genre painting.

Carl Schindler (self-portrait?)