Dora Ohlfsen-Bagge


Adela Dora Ohlfsen-Bagge, known professionally as Dora Ohlfsen, was an Australian sculptor and art medallist. Working mostly in Italy, her first prominent work was a bronze medallion, The Awakening of Australian Art, which won an award at the 1908 Franco-British Exhibition in London and was purchased for the Petit Palais in Paris. Other notable works include the Anzac Medal, created to raise funds for Australians and New Zealanders who fought in the Gallipoli campaign, and Sacrifice, the war memorial in Formia, Italy.
Ohlfsen's portrait medallions were commissioned by or on behalf of a wide range of public figures, such as the actor Mary Anderson, the poet Gabriele D'Annunzio, and several senior politicians, including H. H. Asquith, David Lloyd George, Billy Hughes, and Mussolini, who allowed her to sketch him in 1922 at the Palazzo Chigi while he worked.
In 1948 Ohlfsen and her lifelong partner, Hélène de Kuegelgen, were found dead in their apartment in Rome as a result of a gas leak, deemed by the police to have been an accident. The women were buried together in the city's non-Catholic cemetery, and friends packed up the contents of Ohlfsen's studio, which have never been traced. Twenty-five of [|her works] are known to have survived, out of at least 121.

Early life and education

The fourth of seven daughters, Ohlfsen was born in Ballarat, Victoria, to Kate  Ohlfsen-Bagge, née Harrison, an Australian whose family were from England, and Christian Hermann Ohlfsen-Bagge, an engineer born in Grabionna of Norwegian stock.
The family was well-known locally. Kate Ohlfsen-Bagge was the daughter of Captain John Harrison—born in Cumberland, England, and known in Australia for land squatting and political activism—and granddaughter of the first government printer in Victoria, George Howe. Christian Ohlfsen-Bagge moved to Australia in 1849 and made money during the Victorian gold rush. In 1855 he was the architect of the Olympic Theatre in Melbourne, which had been constructed in England and shipped to Australia, and he was involved in the construction of the Ballarat public library and the Bondi Ocean Outfall Sewer.
When Ohlfsen was 14, the family moved to 4 Mona Terrace, Darling Point, a suburb of Sydney, and from 1884 to 1886 she attended Sydney Girls High School. A 1908 Sydney Mail profile described her when she left school as a "tall, willowy girl of 16, with a very distinguished manner, beautiful dark eyes, and hair, and a brilliant complexion". From around 1888 she studied piano under the French pianist Henri Kowalski, and in June 1889 she performed at the Criterion Theatre. The Sydney Mails Illustrated Supplement featured a profile of her in January 1893, reporting that she had taken Kowalski's place at the Sydney University Musical Society in May 1891 when he had been unable to play—the reporter said "her touch was clear and sparkling"—and at the city's YMCA hall the following May she had given a recital that included Beethoven's Piano Sonata No. 23.
In or around July 1892 Ohlfsen decided to study music in Berlin, a plan that was financed by a female friend, apparently with help from Francis Bathurst Suttor, the Australian Minister for Education, and Alfred Pelldram, Consul-General of Germany for Australia. The Sydney Morning Herald reported that she would leave Sydney on the SS Oldenburg for Bremen, Germany, on 24 December 1892.

Berlin and St. Petersburg

Information about Ohlfsen's life in Europe derives in large measure from Ohlfsen herself, mostly in letters to journalists and friends, including Gother Mann, director of the Art Gallery of New South Wales. There are inconsistencies between the accounts. The historian Ros Pesman writes that "either , the journalist, or both constructed a romantic narrative of the life of the 'lady artist', a little outré and eccentric, including early exotic adventuring and later participation in a cosmopolitan and sophisticated art world."
In Berlin she attended Theodor Kullak's Neue Akademie der Tonkunst, where she studied under Moritz Moszkowski and said she had played for the Kaiser. Her time in Berlin was cut short by health problems, which she attributed to neuritis in her left arm. "All arrangements were made for my debut," she told an interviewer, "and a concert tour through Germany arranged, for which I was to be paid. Now, it was almost unheard of for a debutante to receive payment, and a foreigner appearing there had never previously been paid. My master had arranged that I should. Just as everything was ready, neuritis of the arm developed in a bad way, and I had to give up music entirely, and all thought of becoming a pianiste." She also called it a nervous breakdown caused by "overwork and too little money". The Australian Economic Depression of 1890 had reportedly left her father unable to fund her studies.
Her career as a pianist over, she visited friends in Oranienbaum, Russia, on the Gulf of Finland, and there, it seems, she met her lifelong companion, Hélène de Kuegelgen, a Russian countess. By 1896 she was trying to make a living in St. Petersburg. "I taught music, counterpoint and harmony," she wrote, "coaching musical students for their examinations. Then I became a sort of private secretary to the American ambassador . He had a newspaper in St. Louis, of which he still retained control while carrying out his ambassadorial duties." Apparently she wrote articles on Russian issues for American newspapers under the ambassador's byline. She began studying painting and sculpture and said she had painted a "great matchbox of wood" that the Empress of Russia bought at a bazaar. She also began studying theosophy, a common interest at the time, and said she had turned to art after spiritual voices urged her to do so.

Move to Rome

Via di S. Nicola da Tolentino

Fearing the onset of the 1905 Russian Revolution, Ohlfsen and Kuegelgen moved to Rome in 1902. "From an artist's viewpoint," she wrote, "there is no country like Italy. Its very air breathes the cameraderie and Bohemianism which every artist craves." In letters and interviews, Ohlfsen said she had taken painting classes from Manuel Benedito-Vives at the Spanish Academy; Kuegelgen apparently worked there in or around 1906, perhaps as a model. Ohlfsen also said she had been taught sculpture by Camille Alaphilippe at the French Academy in Rome; Paul Landowski, creator of Christ the Redeemer in Rio de Janeiro; and the metal engraver Pierre Dautel. Art historians Eileen Chanin and Steven Miller note that the French Academy was open only to male French citizens at the time, so Ohlfsen probably attended evening classes there. They write that Dautel, who specialized in medallion portraits and had been compared to Pisanello, had the greatest influence on Ohlfsen.
The women settled into a studio and apartment at Via di S. Nicola da Tolentino 72, opposite the church of San Nicola da Tolentino agli Orti Sallustiani and near Piazza Barberini. It seems they lived there until their deaths in 1948. The Via di S. Nicola da Tolentino was a well-known haunt of writers and artists. The American sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens lived at No. 72 in 1871–1875, as did Franklin Simmons during Ohlfsen's time there. Louisa May Alcott, author of Little Women, apparently had an apartment on the same street in 1870–1871 and, according to Susan Cheever, sat for her first portrait in the studio of the American artist George Healy, also on S. Nicola da Tolentino. "ll the well-known singers, artists, men of letters, society leaders are to be seen," a reporter wrote of Ohlfsen's weekly salons in her studio, "and almost every language to be heard."
Engraving portraits on medallions became fashionable in Europe in the early 20th century, and Kuegelgen used her connections to secure commissions. In 1903 three of Ohlfsen's paintings were exhibited in Rome at the annual Mostra Della Società Amatori e Cultori di Belle Ari; she told a reporter she had been introduced to Queen Elena of Italy. In 1905 three of her portrait low reliefs were shown there, and she exhibited again in 1906 and 1907. Her work at this time included a medallion of Hélène de Kuegelgen, one called Mother and child, medallions of Mattia Battistini and Solomiya Krushelnytska. and of the actor Mary Anderson, which Ohlfsen created in England while staying at Anderson's home in Broadway, Worcestershire. Nellie Melba, the Australian soprano, who also sat for one in England in 1906.
In June 1907 the art historian Arturo Jahn Rusconi wrote in Emporium of Ohlfsen's "delightful bas-reliefs in bronze, portraits and various compositions, executed with tremendous grace and subtlety of spirit. This year, as well as some portrait medals and plaquettes finely worked up, she has exhibited a very beautiful plaque, Autumn , which together with refined taste also demonstrates mastery of sculptural modelling."

''The Awakening of Australian Art'' (1907)

The first of Ohlfsen's art to be added to a public collection was The Awakening of Australian Art, a bronze medallion 29.5 cm in diameter, which the French government purchased in 1907 for the Petit Palais. "Australia is personified as the New Dawn or Venus arising from the sea," Chanin and Miller write. The pastoral scene on the back, with its "strangely living flock of sheep and the lonely shepherd", conveys "the whole soul and spirit of wide spaces of marvellous solitude and of newness and freedom", in the view of one reporter. "Miss Ohlfsen has caught the spirit of Australia." In June 1908 the medal won an award at the Franco-British Exhibition in London. A few months earlier, Ohlfsen's work had been praised in Rivista di Roma, in a three-page cover story by Rusconi:
The Art Gallery of New South Wales bought a full-sized cast of The Awakening of Australian Art in 1910. According to Chanin and Miller, Ohlfsen used several processes to create medals. The more traditional method was to work from the model in wax, after "cut the design on a soft block or a die. The die was then hardened and placed in a hydraulic press and the medal struck down from this." They offer her medal of Gabriele d'Annunzio as an example. For The Awakening, they believe she used a reducing machine. After creating a design in wax or clay, she would create a plaster cast and "from this, a positive casting in iron or bronze. This large metal model was then placed in a reducing machine and copied in a reduced size mechanically, probably on demand and often by a Parisian company which specialized in the process."
Frances Fitzgerald Elmes, who compared Awakening to Bertram Mackennal's :File:Mackennal - 'Circe'.jpg|Circe, reported in September 1908 that Ohlfsen had visited the Franco-British Exhibition in London, which, as well as showing Awakening, had also exhibited the medallion portrait of Mary Anderson. Another medallion shown in London and at the Paris Salon was Femminismo, which portrayed a 1908 suffragist march in London ; on the back was a woman lifting a veil from her eyes. According to one reporter, the medal had "brought upon the artist a shower of appreciation from women of all countries in Paris at the time."

Visit to Sydney (1912–1913)

By 1912 Ohlfsen's work was highly regarded. In 1909 she became the first Australian to be added to the Biographical Dictionary of Medallists, and the following year she was said to be working on a medallion of Archduke Eugen of Austria after Princess Marie of Windisch-Graetz introduced them. She sculpted three nudes around this time: The Pitcher Goes to the Fountain, Le septième voile, and Dawn, all lost.
Hoping to receive a commission in Australia, she returned for 15 months in July 1912. She had made clear in 1908 that she missed Australia: "The scent and sight of a piece of wattle, the scent of gum leaves, even the trying hot winds of Rome affect me indescribably, and bring with them a nostalgia which shows me that my heart is always entirely Australian." The Art Gallery of New South Wales bought five of her works after she submitted 20 pieces, including three statuettes, to a Royal Art Society of New South Wales exhibition in September 1912. Among the works shown was a medallion portrait in lead of Hélène de Kuegelgen, showing "that fair-haired beauty as a woman of noble elegance of face and figure, who leans her chin upon her hand. The modelling is full of detail, and the eye is charmed by the dimpled arm," according to the Sydney Morning Herald, which noted that Ohlfsen and Kuegelgen were living together in Rome. In June 1913 Campbell Carmichael, Minister of Education, unveiled Ohlfsen's bronze medallions of Shakespeare and Goethe in the auditorium of the Little Theatre. After Sydney, she held an exhibition of her medallions in Melbourne.  
One of the medallions exhibited in Sydney was a replica of Femminismo, the portrayal of a women's march. Before she left Australia in 1913, Ohlfsen said she had a message for Australian women: "fter living in countries where women are working so hard for freedom I have been astonished at the casual attitude of the average woman. In other lands your Australian women are looked to as pioneers, as women with golden opportunities; but here you seem to take your advantages as a matter of course. ... It certainly is good to see the absence of the sex-antagonism which is so pronounced in other countries."

Art Gallery of New South Wales commission (1913)

The visit to Australia led to one of Ohlfsen's greatest artistic disappointments, when an important public commission was cancelled. The Art Gallery of New South Wales had commissioned her in August 1913—for £350, —to produce low-relief panels in bronze, 24 ft x 4 ft 6 in, to be installed on the façade directly above its front entrance. Two round panels on either side would display bronze portraits of Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo; the Siot-Decauville foundry in Paris would do the bronze casting. Deciding to depict a chariot race—the Sydney Morning Herald called it "A Roman Chariot Race" in April 1914—Ohlfsen began work on it after returning to Rome in October 1913. She told the newspaper she needed to work in her own studio "with my friends coming in and out, criticising and helping"; she hoped to return to Australia the following year to see it installed.
Chanin and Miller write that, inspired by Classical Greek art, Ohlfsen exaggerated the physicality of the men and horses so that a sense of movement remained evident from a distance. She had declared herself an admirer of Ivan Meštrović, the Serbian sculptor; she told a niece he was "the greatest sculptor in the world" and that he was currently "500 BC Greek". But it seems the gallery's trustees came to believe the sculpture's details would be lost from its position over the entrance. They responded positively to her proposals in December 1914, and in 1915 she took photographs of the work to London. By 1917 she had sent the trustees photographs of the completed plaster cast, and later she sent them two examples of the cast, both lost. She said in 1920 that it had taken her two years to complete the cast and that she had exhibited it in Rome.
In September 1919, after a series of disputes, the trustees cancelled the commission. There had been a disagreement about the cost of bronze; Ohlfsen said the gallery's director, Gother Mann, must "really imagine that I have sums of money lying about in war time to spend like that on my own account. I am not Mackennal at whose feet Australia pours mines of liquid gold ..." In June 1917 she asked the gallery to pay for the bronze in advance: "I am certainly not going to have the panel cast in bronze until the money is in the bank with which to pay the founder ...".
There was also an artistic disagreement. Ohlfsen wrote to Mann in October 1916 about the portraits of da Vinci and Michelangelo: "those two enormous heads will kill the importance of the principal panel". She wrote later: "You have not answered me as to my suggestions for the two end panels of one yard square. As I pointed out in a previous letter two large heads of Michelangelo and Leonardo da Vinci would be anachronisms as they don't belong to the Greek epoch of the panel. It is a Greek chariot race."
entrance, 2011
The cancellation came as a great shock to Ohlfsen, who feared it would damage her reputation; she wrote to F. Graham Lloyd, the gallery's London agent, in November 1919: "I cannot tell you how amazed I am, nor how incomprehensible it all seems to me nor how unexpected." She complained about it to William Holman, Premier of New South Wales, because in 1916 the gallery had spent ₤4,920 on two statues by Gilbert Bayes. To keep costs down, she suggested to the trustees that they install the plaster cast and paint it a bronze colour until bronze returned to its pre-war price. But the cancellation stood; the chair of the trustees, John Sulman, wrote to Mann in January 1920: "Miss Ohlfsen is a woman, and although she has no case, can cause mischief."
The space above the front entrance remained empty for over 100 years. In October 2019 the gallery opened an exhibition, Dora Ohlfsen and the [|façade commission] to explore the cancellation. Six female artists from New South Wales were asked to examine Ohlfsen's photographs and reflect on what to do with the space.

''Anzac'' medal (1916)

During World War I, Ohlfsen and Kuegelgen trained as Red Cross nurses. She wrote to Gother Mann of the Art Gallery of New South Wales:
In January 1915 she helped to nurse the injured during the Avezzano earthquake, and later worked in the Italian Auxiliary Hospital near her studio in Rome; photographs of her in her nurse's uniform were published in Australia. Art historian Juliette Peers noted that Ohlfsen's "anecdotes of life on the Italian front found a ready market amongst Australian journalists". Other artwork at this time included a medallion of her friend Colonel Duke Fulco Tosti di Valminuta.
In October 1916 Ohlfsen created the work she is best known for in Australia, the Anzac Medallion, originally intended to help and commemorate members of the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps who took part in the Gallipoli campaign during World War I. Sixty thousand Australian soldiers, out of an overall population of four million, died during the war. She told Mann that, although she had created it for Gallipoli, the medallion "could be dedicated to those fallen in this war in general. If it should be put to any use by the Government I should like half of the proceeds to go the mutilated." When it was issued in 1919, the original 1915–16 date range was changed to 1914–18.
The front of the medal depicts a young woman, who represents Australia, bending over a young man to place a laurel wreath on his head; the back, showing an Anzac soldier with a rifle, bears the inscription "Anzac. In Eternal Remembrance. 1914–18", and in smaller letters "Dora Ohlfsen 1916". The woman was based on 21-year-old Alexandra Simpson, who lived in Rome, the daughter of the British High Commissioner in China. Ohlfsen wrote to Mann: "I have made 'Australia' and her son very young—representing as they do the youngest country and the youngest army."
According to numismatics curator Ken Sheedy, the medal is "perhaps one of the most remarkable of all Australian commemorative medals ... distinguished by its skill and poignancy" from other World War I medals. Peers argued that the image of the soldier on the reverse, almost in silhouette, "avoided the usual over-literal depiction of men in uniform, which characterises the more pedantic medals that generally were produced in Australia during and after the war. The almost total emphasis on the outline of the figure allows ... to consider the question of negative, as well as positive, space within the roundel suggesting ... how keenly she attended to the issue of designing for the medal format."
Ohlfsen apparently sold hundreds of the medals to Sir Charles Wade, Premier of New South Wales, so that he could sell them in Australia at two guineas each to raise money. They were sold in a box lined with silk and included the dedication "in aid of Australians and New Zealanders maimed in the War—1914–1918". Edward, Prince of Wales received the first medal, and Wade, along with Generals William Birdwood, John Monash, and Talbot Hobbs, joined a committee in 1919 to oversee the distribution. Ohlfsen wrote to the director of the Art Gallery of New South Wales in January 1917: "I am doing a series of medals on my own account to commemorate the war. One for Anzacs, which is finished, one for the Italians, one for the artists of the French Academy in Rome and one of the Russian Cavalry." She announced in July 1919 that she had completed one for the American airforce. Valued at £15 in 1978 in Seaby's Coin and Medal Bulletin, several Anzac medals are held in the Art Gallery of New South Wales, the Art Gallery of Ballarat, and the Australian War Memorial.
The Mornington Soldier's Memorial war in Mornington, Victoria, dedicated in 1925, features the front of Ohlfsen's Anzac image on a plaque set into the base of a large cross. Ohlfsen worked on the plaque in 1921 during her visit to Australia. Historian Ken Inglis wrote in 1987 that it was the only "war-memorial representation of Australia as a female" that he was aware of. A reporter at the unveiling ceremony assumed the woman was a nurse.

Visit to Sydney (1920–1922)

To promote sales of the Anzac Medal, Ohlfsen visited Australia in 1920 for the first time since 1913. She set up a studio in Sydney at 110 Bathurst Street, and Dame Margaret Davidson organized an exhibition of her work there. Exhibits included Mrs. Grey, a painting of Alexandra Simpson, model for the Anzac medal; The Awakening of Australian Art; a pastel of the Austrian bombing of Venice; a small sculpture called the Blind Ardito ; and medallion portraits of General Birdwood, David Lloyd George, H. H. Asquith, General Giuseppe Garibaldi II, Sir Charles Wade, William Holman, and Cardinal William Henry O'Connell. A writer who met her in 1922 described her as "all and of one figure":
Her other work at this time included medallions of Australian Prime Minister Billy Hughes and one of Robert Randolph Garran—Solicitor-General of Australia and an old friend of her father who acted as Ohlfsen's mentor— and a bust of Nellie Stewart that appeared in Women's World. She had apparently hoped during the visit to resolve the issue of the façade commission for the Art Gallery of New South Wales. In September 1920 she told the Sydney Sunday Times that the trustees were "waiting until bronze is cheaper to have it cast". The delay was inconvenient, she said, because she had been storing the plaster cast, 8 x 2 yards, in her studio in Rome for the last three years.
She considered staying in Australia—in June 1919 she had told Gother Mann that "the coming winter will be my last "—but having failed to reach the priorities she had set for herself, she returned to Rome, leaving Australia in February 1922 on the SS Orsova. Before she left, she gave a lecture on "Futuristic art in its relation to Bolshevism" at the Socialist Hall in Melbourne, calling futurism "the sweeping away of every canon of art in the academic sense in order to destroy the vices into which modern art had fallen".

Mussolini medallion (1922)

In 1922 Ohflsen was commissioned, by a man with mining interests in Italy, to create a medallion of Benito Mussolini, Prime Minister of Italy from October 1922 to July 1943. After apparently giving her two-hour sittings at the Palazzo Chigi while he worked, Mussolini signed the plaster cast and added the inscription "per ardua ad astra".
An early supporter of Mussolini and the National Fascist Party, Ohlfsen was in the crowd during the March on Rome on 30 October 1922 when the fascists took power. "We have been passing through many thrilling times here," she wrote to the Sydney Morning Herald in January 1923, "no less than a revolution with a king the head of it. ... At 1 pm I went down to the Café Aragno, on the Corso, with a party of friends. ... We stood on chairs there till 5:30, watching the Corteo march past. ... The Corteo was headed by Mussolini, and the entire procession composed of 100,000 Fascisti, marched past the tomb , giving the Fascisti salute—raising the arm—as in the days of ancient Rome." She described Mussolini in 1925:
The fascists became a source of many of her commissions. Ohlfsen was "strongly influenced by the cult of dynamic he-men forging history, in line with early Italian Fascism," Stella Free wrote in the Grove Dictionary of Art. "With modernist overtones, her art is a celebration of idealized figures in their prime, conveying patriotic themes and nationalistic sentiment."

''Sacrifice'' (1926)

In or around 1923, as a result of Ohlfsen's friendship with Duke Fulco Tosti di Valminuta, who had become an undersecretary in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Italian government commissioned her to create a war memorial in Formia on the coast of Lazio. At the time she was reportedly the only woman in Italy and the only non-Italian to have been awarded such a commission. In February 1925 she told a correspondent that the work was completed, apart from finishing touches, and was being sent to Formia. Entitled Sacrifice, the 30-foot-tall sculpture consists of a young man, in bronze, standing on a white-marble pedestal with his arms outstretched; on the pedestal itself, holding a palm and a laurel branch, a woman inclines toward the names of those who died in World War I. The inscription, translated, reads "Oh, my country! The life thou gave me I return to thee." The unveiling in July 1926 in the Piazza della Vittoria was attended by General Armando Diaz; Ohlfsen was awarded the Freedom of the City and a silver shield. She described the ceremony in a letter:
Chanin and Miller write that Ohlfsen's "choice of bronze and marble for her monument, the decorative band of fasci at the top of the support and her coupling of masculine sacrifice with feminine nurturing fits well with the fascist agenda for sculpture, in its promotion of the myth of Italianiata. Vitalist notions popular the time probably also influenced the work. ... Interest in 'body culture' was a feature of the 1920s, with both communists and fascists emphasising physical fitness as a key to national regeneration." Mussolini reportedly told Ohlfsen: "you may now be considered an Italian sculptress." Reportedly to Ohlfsen's great distress, the Formia memorial was dismantled in 1941—deemed to be "of great historic and patriotic value, but not of great artistic worth"—but it was restored in 2008.
Ohlfsen was highly critical of the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, Sydney, which was completed in 1934. She wrote in a letter: "I'm perfectly shocked at the war memorial they have erected in Sydney done by stonemasons I hear.... you will note that the nature of the scaled soldiers in a row is nothing but an illustration of 'Latrine Parade' so much described in all the war books. Added to that people write to me that there is to be a centrepiece of a naked woman strung up on a cross!! And the authors of this abomination have the effrontery to call it 'Sacrifice' stealing the title of my war memorial in Formia?"

Later work

In 1930 Ohlfsen was invited, along with other artists, to submit sketches for sculptures for the inner shrine of Melbourne's Shrine of Remembrance. Asked to sketch Charity and Love, she was disappointed, calling the invitation "this crumb". In the end, the memorial committee chose other work and her idea didn't progress beyond a plaster cast. Robert Randolph Garran, the former Solicitor-General who became her friend and mentor, had suggested her to a group that was organizing the memorial. "I have the most glorious idea you can conceive of for the Canberra War Memorial but do not dare to tell you," she wrote to him in January 1932. "These are very hard times for me and I simply have not got the money to go to Australia unless it is for something definite. ... Supposing I had the money available and went to Australia and after a heart-breaking fight did not get the work I would be so smashingly disappointed that I would be quite capable of killing myself!"
Visitors to Rome still called in at Ohlfsen's studio on the Via di S. Nicola da Tolentino. Writing in the Sydney Morning Herald in 1935, Huntly McCrae Cowper described "a big room high up in a corner with long windows looking down into narrow streets on either side. As we came in I felt that I was in a crowd of silent people. All round us were figures in bronze and marble, some shrouded in calico, looking like ghosts in fading light.
When Mary Jay, a Sydney writer, visited in 1933, the [|chariot-race plaster cast] created for the Art Gallery of New South Wales was hanging on the wall, and the room was full of sculptures: gardens and fountains, a relief of the Greek god Dionysus in grey stone, several in pink marble, and a mural of Anthony of Padua with Australian flowers; Ohlfsen was working on another of Francis of Assisi with Australian birds. "There are divans and cosy corners, where a glass of Italian vermouth and a cigarette may be enjoyed by the favoured; there are also screens behind which we may not venture, and the whole place has an atmosphere of artistic mystery—very Italian looking and charming." Ohflsen she described as "tall and graceful with remarkable hands. While working she swathes her head in a coloured kerchief, which hides her pretty hair."

Death

Little was heard from Ohlfsen during World War II. In October 1940 her name was included in a list of Australians who had been denied permission to leave Italy, a list released by Australia's Minister for External Affairs. Reportedly distressed by the dismantling of the Formia war memorial in 1941, she had been left without work by the fall of the fascists, the source of many of her commissions. The protecting powers gave her some kind of assistance during the war, after which she and Kuegelgen apparently had to finance themselves by selling their belongings.
On 7 February 1948 the women were found dead as a result of a gas leak in their apartment on the Via di S. Nicola da Tolentino. The police declared the deaths an accident, but there was inevitably speculation that it was suicide. "To the end," Peers wrote, " maintained the sense of the dramatic that she had always cultivated." According to Miller, her studio was packed up by friends, and the contents have not been traced. The women were buried together at Cimitero Acattolico, the non-Catholic cemetery in Rome, in zone 1, row 15, plot 28, tomb number 1091. Ohlfsen's relief of Dionysus sits on the tombstone, which reads in Italian:

Collections

Ohlfsen's work is held in:

Medallions

Sculptures

Paintings

Works cited

*