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Rosebraugh's artwork seeks connections between humans and examines how those parallel our relationship
with the environment. She incorporates natural materials joined together with fabricated objects to
establish a contact between man and nature. Each creation explores the human quest for comfort
versus our need to live mindfully on the earth. The works can be temporary, created using
materials and elements on site which decompose in time - symbolic of the cycle and regeneration
of our planet. The work is based on the exchange of ideas and resources, sometimes with direct
participation by people as possible vehicles for social change. Through her practice she nurtures a
discourse on human existence as a whole, its kinship to systems of control, time, and nature.
Focused on painting, sculpture, video and installation, her work attempts to transcend the ruins
of the past and the challenges of the present by offering a context that facilitates the analysis
of our responsibility, needs and desires in a future unknown.
Rosebraugh attained her MFA in Florence, Italy and currently lives and works in Marnay Sur Seine,
France and Los Angeles, California. In 2016, her work was accepted into 3 group exhibitions
in City Hall (2nd arrondissement) in Paris, France in conjunction with the International Summit on
Climate Change. Rosebraugh’s artwork is part of the Permanent Collection of the Museo de Arte
Contemporanea di Florina in Greece and the Hermann Nitsch Museum in Naples, Italy. Her work was
installed into the Natural History/State Darwin Museum in Moscow, Russia for an exhibition on
ecology titled “Now & After.” In 2018 her work was featured in ACCESS magazine published in Soul,
Korea and in 2020 was included in an exhibition titled “Corona and Climate Crisis” at the Group Global
3000 Gallery for Sustainable Art in Berlin, Germany.
Her artist residencies have included sailing the Arctic Circle, creating work based on the importance
of water at the Scuola Internazionale di Grafica in Venice, Italy, studying water from the River Seine
at the Camac Foundation in Marnay Sur Seine, France, as well as water research in Naples, Italy in
collaboration with the Hermann Nitsch museum. She has created public art pieces in Los Angeles,
California, Gearhart, Oregon and Paris, France. Currently she is the co director of L’Expressoir Artist
Residency in Marnay Sur Seine, and was recently featured in LA Voyage magazine, (fall 2020) the
LA Downtown News (Summer 2020) and Shout Out LA magazine (2021).