Signed lower right. Perspective of the buildings of Terezin.Digital imageEstate of the artist, Doris Rauch.Born in Bruenn, Austria-Hungary (now Brno, Czechoslovakia) in 1900, Norbert Troller served as a soldier in World War I, spending time as a prisoner-of-war in Italy. After the war, he studied architecture in Brno and Vienna and worked as an architect in Brno until the German occupation of Czechoslovakia. He was deported to Theresienstadt in 1942, where he worked as an architect for the Jewish self-adminstration of the camp and produced works of art as well. In 1944, he was imprisoned by the Gestapo and was sent to Auschwitz later that year. After liberation, he lived briefly in Kraków, and then reopened his architectural business in P...