Publications
& Articles
SELECTED PUBLICATIONS
New
Mexico Millennium Collection – Laichas, Fowler,
Stem – 2001
Who’s Who of American Women – 21st Edition
– Paul Canning – Marquis Who’s Who -2001
Who’s Who in the World – 17th Edition
– Dawn Melley – Marquis Who’s Who –
2000
Who’s Who in the Midwest 26th Edition –
Fred M. Marks – Marquis Who’s Who – 1998
Outdoor Sculpture in Texas – Carol
M. Little – University of Texas Press - 1996
Masters of American Sculpture – Donald
M. Reynolds – Abbeville Press - 1993
Great American Artists – Cincinnati
Art Museum – 1997-2003
National Sculpture Society publications -
1982-2003
SELECTED
ARTICLES
“Sculptor Profile: Rosie Sandifer”, National
Sculpture Society, News Bulletin – March/April 2002
“Realistic Impressions”,
The News-Gazette – Champaign, IL - January
6, ‘02
“Frozen In Time”, Herald-Journal
– Spartanburg, SC – April 10. ‘02
“150 People”, The News-Gazette
– Champaign, IL – February 23, ‘02
“Terminal Velocity” January ’99;
“Sculpting Future Art” January
’99; “No Favorites” February
’99;
“Creating a Lifelong Reader”,
April ‘99’ - The News-Gazette – Champaign,
IL
“Brookgreen Returns to Festival”,
The Post and Courier – Pawley’s Island, SC –
Sept. ‘98
Art
Revue Magazine – Summer Issue ‘93
Southwest
Art Magazine – November ‘91
“Building Roughneck”, The Scene
– Ft. Collins, CO – August ‘90
“Family Drawing & Sculpting”,
Lubbock Avalanche Journal – Lubbock, TX ’77, ‘79
SCULPTOR PROFILE: ROSIE SANDIFER
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| Ready
to Read |
Rosie
Sandifer makes heroes out of the regular working person. No
job or activity is too small for her to sketch, sculpt and
reproduce to monumental size. Her sculptures highlight the
nobility of the common man and woman as they go about their
daily lives. Sandifer’s portfolio of subjects includes
office workers, oilrig drillers, construction workers, working
mothers, working fathers and plenty of children. No one fancy,
simply the salt of the earth. And why does she choose these
people as her subjects instead of historical or celebrated
figures? “I am always attracted to people in everyday
life and the human form. Walking down the street is always
a revelation and an inspiration, and I see about a dozen scenes
I would like to sketch and cast in bronze.”
And speaking to Sandifer, you know immediately that she is
just as much the salt of the earth as the people she sculpts.
And she knows hard work, too. She is not only a talented sculptor,
but a gifted painter as well. She was married and the mother
of two before she began her career in sculpture. Sandifer
is aware of the difficulty in balancing a family life and
a working life, and it’s that sensitivity and knowledge
she brings to her portraits.
(Excerpt from National Sculpture Society News Bulletin
– March/April 2002)
Determination and dedication have helped this
human puzzle come together in an irresistible picture. A fiery,
effervescent woman of art who has succeeded in her right livelihood,
Sandifer continues to draw on the pieces of her life for strength
and inspiration. She brings magic and mystery to her viewers.
(Excerpt from Art Revue Magazine, Summer 1993, by Mary
Herrick)
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