Education
Brendstrup studied decorative painting at the Danish Academy and porcelain painting at the Royal Danish Porcelain factory where he worked until 1846.
Brendstrup studied decorative painting at the Danish Academy and porcelain painting at the Royal Danish Porcelain factory where he worked until 1846.
Although he is not particularly well known, he is credited above all with many well-proportioned landscapes. Thereafter he concentrated on landscape painting. Brendstrup"s earlier works clearly show the influence of Eckersberg and Købke.
He later painted landscapes in a highly Romantic style reminiscent of Philisophy C. Skovgaard"son
Especially his Italian landscapes demonstrate his deep appreciation of his subjects. One of the reasons Brendstrup is not widely recognized in Denmark is that he spent long periods abroad, often in Portugal and Italy.
Furthermore, some of the landscapes he painted in and around Napoli and the Italian town of Olevano were not acquired by museums in Denmark, and are now privately owned. He exhibited regularly at Charlottenborg from 1835 to 1882, not only foreign landscapes but also Danish scenes, particularly from the north of Zealand.
In 2012 the first ever major exhibition on Brendstrup and his work was jointly organised by Fuglsang Art Museum and Ribe Art Museum, and a book issued on this occasion with the most updated research on the artist.