Conrad Carlman

Biographical information

RolesCompeted in Olympic Games
SexMale
Full nameHugo Conrad•Carlman
Used nameConrad•Carlman
Born16 January 1891 in Karlskrona, Blekinge (SWE)
Died19 July 1945 in Stockholm, Stockholm (SWE)
NOC Sweden

Biography

Conrad Carlman was a Swedish sculptor from a family with a strong background in the royal and naval service. He was trained at the Althin Painting School in 1910 and then the Royal Academy of Fine Arts at Stockholm (1911-17). On a Jenny Lind Scholarship, he also trained while traveling Europe after World War I, in Germany, France and Italy, working on the execution of bronze fountains. He mostly worked in plaster, with some works also executed in bronze, and also in marble and granite in the neoclassical style of the 1920s. His works include the group Pastoral at the National Museum in Stockholm, a maritime monument at Älvsnabben, and a statue of General Admiral Wachtmeister in Karlskrona. He also produced the baptismal font in Förkärla Church, another maritime monument in Karlshamn, and the St. Staffan Statue of Gävle. Carlman was appointed secretary of the Association of Swedish Sculptors in 1931. The statue Diskuskastaren (Discus Thrower) was created in 1931.

Results

Games Discipline (Sport) / Event NOC / Team Pos Medal As
1932 Summer Olympics Art Competitions SWE Conrad Carlman
Sculpturing, Statues, Open (Olympic) AC