Dagmar Grassinger

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Dagmar Grassinger is a German classical archaeologist .

Dagmar Grassinger received his doctorate in 1987 from the University of Heidelberg under Tonio Hölscher with a thesis on Roman marble craters . She then worked at the Research Archive for Roman Sculpture at the Archaeological Institute of the University of Cologne until 1990 . In 1991 she became a research assistant on the corpus of ancient sarcophagus reliefs at the University of Marburg . In 1994 Grassinger received a postdoctoral fellowship from the German Research Foundation , in 1998 she was a Research Fellow at the Institute of Classical Studies at the University of London , in 1999 initially on behalf of Klaus Junker as a research assistant at the Archaeological Institute of the University of Mainz , then until 2000 as a research assistant with teaching duties at the Archaeological Institute of the University of Bonn . Grassinger completed her habilitation in 2000 with the work Life and Death in Beautiful Pictures at the University of Marburg, where she was appointed private lecturer. Afterwards she was again a research assistant at the Marburg Corpus of the ancient sarcophagus reliefs. In 2003/04 she taught as a visiting professor in Bonn, and from 2006 to 2008 at the Winckelmann Institute at the Humboldt University in Berlin . In between, she was curator for the exhibition The Return of the Gods from 2004 to 2006 . Berlin's Hidden Olympus of Antikensammlung Berlin responsible. In 2009 she was a research assistant on the sub-project Appropriation of Ancient Sculpture through Reinterpretation and Restoration in the 17th and 18th Centuries of the Collaborative Research Center 644 of the DFG. Since 2009 she has been teaching as a substitute for Dietrich Boschung as a professor at the University of Cologne.

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