Cynthia Osborne, Professor Emerita
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Biography
A native of New Milford, Connecticut, Cynthia Osborne received a
BA in Studio Art (1969) from Connecticut College and an MFA in Printmaking
(1971) from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Other education
includes a Tamarind Lithography Workshop and Lithographic History
Seminar at the Rare Book School in Virginia. She has exhibited in
group juried and invitational shows throughout the United States
and internationally, and held a MacDowell Colony Fellowship. Her
work is in the collections of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art,
Brooklyn Museum, Whitney Museum and Smithsonian Museum of American
Art. Osborne has been on the faculty at CSULB since 1975, and currently
teaches Lithography as well as holds the positions of Graduate Advisor
and Student Gallery Director for the Art Department.
Professor Osborne's prints have been concern with narrative imagery
in the tradition of the rendered lithographic crayon drawing on
stone, with forays into tusche washes, transfer processes and screen
printing. The subject matter of recent work has dealt with a personal
take on the meanings of prehistoric megalithic monuments, while
the intent for an upcoming series is to return to a consideration
of the presence and/or predicament of animals on a mega, if not
lithic, scale, the great whales.
Recent activities, while not pushing students through the graduate
program and scheduling exhibitions, have included: organizing a
Bicentennial of Lithography Workshop for the 1998 CSU Summer Arts
program; presentations at Southern Graphics Council National Printmaking
Conferences; and participation in several portfolio exchange projects --
in particular, Drawn to Stone, in honor of the anniversary of
lithography.
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