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Fanny Osborne

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Name
  
Fanny Osborne


Fanny Osborne historicindianapoliscomwpcontentuploads20131

Role
  
Robert Louis Stevenson's wife

Died
  
February 10, 1914, Santa Barbara, California, United States

Spouse
  
Robert Louis Stevenson (m. 1880–1894), Samuel Osbourne (m. 1857)

Children
  
Lloyd Osbourne, Isobel Osbourne Field, Hervey Osbourne

Parents
  
Esther Thomas Keen, Jacob Vandegrift

Books
  
More New Arabian Nights: T, The Cruise of the Janet Nichol A, Great Stories of Courage, Our Samoan Adventure, Notre aventure aux Samoa

Similar People
  
Robert Louis Stevenson, Lloyd Osbourne, Isobel Osbourne Field, Nancy Horan, Thomas Stevenson

Fanny Osborne (née Malcolm, 29 January 1852 – 12 March 1934) was a prominent New Zealand artist. She was born in Auckland, New Zealand in 1852.

Life

At the age of six Osborne moved with her parents and 12 siblings to Great Barrier Island, about 90 kilometres to the north-east of Auckland. Osborne's parents began cattle farming at Rosalie Bay in the south of the island. Growing up in such an isolated location was challenging, but Osborne's mother Emilie recognised artistic talents in her daughter at an early stage. She married Joe Osborne in 1874; they settled at Tryphena at the southern end of Great Barrier Island and commenced raising a family of 13 children. As Osborne did not date her paintings it is not known when she commenced painting the indigenous plants of Great Barrier Island. However, over a period of some decades her work reached the highest quality and is now greatly appreciated from both artistic and scientific points of view. Her paintings of the Adams mistletoe (Trilepidia adamsii) are particularly important as this species is now considered extinct, and no colour photographs of it exist. Osborne died in Auckland on 12 March 1934 and is buried on Great Barrier Island. A collection of Fanny Osborne's paintings of Great Barrier Island plants was published in 1983 by Jeanne Goulding of the Auckland Museum, whose botany department holds the largest collection of Osborne's works.

References

Fanny Osborne Wikipedia