- Karen T. Taylor
:otherpersons|Karen Taylor
Karen T. Taylor (born 1952) is an American Forensic and Portrait Artist who has worked for over a quarter century helping resolve prominent criminal cases for a variety of law enforcement agencies throughout the world. Her primary expertise includes composite imagery, child and adult age progression, postmortem drawing and
forensic facial reconstruction . In the mid 1980's, Taylor pioneered the method of 2-dimensional facial reconstruction, by drawing facial features over frontal and lateral skull photographs based on anthropological data. Taylor is also well-established as a forensic art educator, fine art portrait sculptor, and specialist in the human face.Background
Taylor, a native of Fort Worth Texas, developed an early aptitude for drawing and sculpting faces. She attended the University of Texas School of Fine Arts and the Chelsea School of Fine Art in London. While in England, she worked as a portrait sculptor for Madame Tussaud's Wax Museum. Taylor returned to Texas and spent over 18 years as the Texas Department of Public Safety's first full-time forensic artist.
Taylor has been a forensic art instructor for over twenty years at the FBI Academy in Quantico, Virginia and other law enforcement academies, universities, art and medical schools internationally. She also conducts training workshops for fine artists and specializes in highly accurate portraits in bronze. Her bronze sculpture of forensic scientist George Taft is displayed at the
Alaska State Troopers Museum in Anchorage, Alaska. Taft's sculpture was the first in a series of Taylor's "Good Guys," a series of bronzes which commemorate individuals who have made a significant contribution to society. After years of depicting the "Bad Guys" and their victims, Taylor now also focuses on honoring the "Good Guys".Karen now lives in the Austin, Texas area. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Austinites]
pecial Recognition
Director's Citation
During her career at the Texas Department of Public Safety, Colonel Dudley M. Thomas honored Taylor for service beyond the normal course of duty, "performing the difficult task of identifying victims and assisting in bringing dangerous criminals to justice".
Director Thomas recognized her "professionlism, ambition, and talent which advanced her status as a forensic artist to a position that leads the nation in providing a variety of forensic art techniques and services". The award made particular note of Karen's ingenuity and initiative which led to the development of the2-dimensional facial reconstruction technique that "has been recognized internationally, revolutionizing skull-to-face reconstruction and making an invaluable contribution to the Department, law enforcement and anthropological research."
Colonel Thomas cited Karen's "expertise, diligence and dedication in the performance of her duties" as "reflecting great credit upon her, the profession of law enforcement and the Texas Department of Public Safety".
Texas Women of the Century
After years of success as a forensic artist, helping capture criminals and identify their victims, Taylor was named one of the "Texas Women of the Century" in 1999, a tribute to the 100 most influential Texas women of the past century. The twenty four collaborating organizations of the Women of the Century Project described her as "the premier forensic artist in the world". Taylor shared the honor with fellow recipients, Barbara Bush, Dale Evans, Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison, Lady Bird Johnson, Barbara Jordon, Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, Governor Ann Richards, Mary Kay Ash and Elizabet Ney and others.
Dondero Award
In 2002, she was the first woman to receive the prestigious Dondero Award [http://www.theiai.org/membership/awards.php] from the International Association for Identification for her "outstanding contribution in the field of scientific identificaton". Previous Dondero Award recipients include J. Edgar Hoover and Dr. Henry Lee.
Consultant Work
Since 1990, Taylor has been a contributor to
America's Most Wanted on FOX. Her work has also been featured on ABC, CBS, CNN, Court TV [http://www.crimelibrary.com/criminal_mind/forensics/art/5.html] , the Discovery Channel, the History Channel, Telemundo and the BBC. CBS drama created a forensic artist character based on Taylor and her artwork and hands have appeared on both the Las Vegas-based and New York-based shows [http://www.csicollection.com/interview03.php] . Taylor served as a "real life" consultant to museum exhibit "CSI: the Experience", [http://www.csitheexperience.com/] a traveling interactive exhibition developed by the Fort Worth Museum of Science and History. Taylor has also contributed to the popular programBones (TV series) on FOX.Historical Projects
suspended from sheer cliffs.
Using a skull casting, Taylor also revealed, for the first time, the sculpted face of the Red Queen of Palenque, a Mayan Queen [http://www.askart.com/askart/artist.aspx?artist=11009052] who lived 1000 years ago.
Publications
Karen Taylor authored the in-depth textbook, "Forensic Art and Illustration", CRC Press, Boca Raton, London, New York, Washington DC, 2001. [http://www.amazon.com/Forensic-Art-Illustration-Karen-Taylor/dp/0849381185] [http://www.geradts.com/anil/ij/vol_003_no_001/reviews/tb/page008.html]
Taylor was featured in "American Artist Drawing" magazine, Summer 2006 in an article titled, "Understanding Faces from the Inside Out" by Edith Zimmerman.
References
* http://www.askart.com/askart/artist.aspx?artist=11009052
* http://www.geradts.com/anil/ij/vol_003_no_001/reviews/tb/page008.html
* http://www.karenttaylor.com/aboutKTTb.html
* http://www.theiai.org/membership/awards.php
* "Taylor, Karen T." World of Forensic Science. Ed. K. Lee Lerner and Brenda Wilmoth Lerner. Gale Group, Inc., 2006. eNotes.com. 2006. 16 Nov, 2007 http://www.enotes.com/forensic-science/taylor-karen-t
* Taylor, Karen T., "Forensic Art and Illustration", Boca Raton, London, New York, Washington D.C.: CRC Press, 2001.
* "Web Interview:Karen T. Taylor, forensic art consultant" http://www.csicollection.com/interview03.php
* Zimmerman, Edith. "Understanding Faces from the Inside Out: The Art of Forensic Drawing." "American Artist Drawing", Summer 2006.
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