Rose Koller | |
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Born | February 10, 1909 |
Died | September 3, 2008 | (aged 99)
Rose Koller (February 10, 1909 - September 3, 2008) was an Austrian sculptor.
Koller worked for the Natural History Museum in Vienna starting in 1933. In 1936, the Smithsonian's Anthropological Department commissioned a series of "family portrait-sculptures of ancient Austrians."[1] Koller worked with a sculptor team. They used prehistoric skulls to model scientifically accurate heads for exhibition in an early example of forensic facial reconstruction.[2][3]
Koller published a paper in 1935, Ein Beitrag zur Schädelkunde der Juden (Skull science of the Jews), which was a craniologic study of the Jewish population of Constantinople.[4] She joined the NSDAP in 1938.[citation needed]
Koller worked for the Natural History Museum where she created a historical bust of St. Leopold which was exhibited at the 500th anniversary of his canonization.[5]