Oskar Icha (11 October 1886, Vienna – 1 October 1945, Vienna) was an Austrian sculptor who specialized in reliefs.
He studied sculpting at the Academy of Fine Arts, Vienna, where his primary instructor was Anton Hanak.[1] During his time there, he received several awards, including the Academy's Gundel-Prize for excellence. In 1921, he was awarded the .
He created several war memorials, notably in Aspern, cemetery sculptures for the funeral hall at the, and the "Risen Christ" at the . In 1927, he created a relief of Beethoven at the in Jedlesee which, until 2013, was used as a monument to the composer. In 1930, the city of Vienna commissioned several reliefs for community buildings and, in 1931, he received a gold medal from the Albrecht-Dürer-Bund, an artists' society founded in 1851.[2]
In 1935, he took part in a competition for a monument to labor on the and, the following year, for one dedicated to Emperor Franz Joseph I.[3] He was a member of the, and participated in their exhibitions at the Palmenhaus.
He committed suicide in 1945, and was interred at the Jedleseer Friedhof. In 1971, a street in Vienna's district was named after him.