Carl Von Perbandt
Alexander Valley sold
oil on canvas
20″ x 36″
(1832-1911) Carl Von Perbandt was born in Lagendorf, East Prussia on May 12, 1832 into an aristocratic family. Von Perbandt studied at the Dusseldorf Academy under Lessing and Achenbach. For political reasons he decamped to the U.S. in 1870. After several years in New York City, he moved to San Francisco in 1877. He was based there except for a period of about five years when he lived in the backwoods of Sonoma, Mendocino, and Humboldt counties leading, according the Morning Call, “a careless bohemian life.” While in the rural areas, he painted several scenes of Fort Ross and lived among the Pomo Indians for a while. Von Perbandt shared a studio in San Francisco with Henry Raschen and often accompanied Raschen on painting excursions. His works bear evidence of the Barbizon and Hudson River Schools. Many of his paintings were lost in the earthquake and fire of 1906. Von Perbandt returned to Germany in 1903 and died in Nahmgeist on April 6, 1911. Member: Bohemian Club; San Francisco Art Association. Exhibited: National Academy of Design, New York City, 1874; Mechanics’ Institute, San Francisco, 1880-99; San Francisco Art Association, 1881-97; California State Fair, 1887-96. Works Held: California Historical society; Oakland Museum; Society of California Pioneers; St. Mary’s College.