Judith Osborn
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Judith Osborn | |
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Judith Osborn.JPG | |
Born | December 3, 1966 |
🏳️ Nationality | Dutch |
💼 Occupation | Visual artist,Media personality[1] |
Judith Osborn (Den Helder, 3 December 1966) is an Dutch television presenter, model.
Career[edit]
Osborn, educated at the Royal Academy of Art in The Hague, made a name for himself as a designer of aT-shirts with a challenging print, such as 'Glamourpoes', 'Ich habe es nicht gewurst', 'Fish Wife' and 'Where there's smoke, there's sausage'. The T-shirts are sold in hundreds of stores domestically and abroad by her company JO. In 2006 she launched a complete clothing line. After the death of her husband, she designed collections for the store chain CoolCat and Sacha Shoes and was employed by the car brand to design a special edition of the Smart ForFour. She also launched her own line of school supplies. In July 2007 Osborn was guest editor of the magazine Quote. During the opening of Fashion Week 2007 Jort Kelder presented her with the first copy.
Osborn also works as an artist. In 2015 her solo exhibition Everybody is nobody in the Judith Wolberink Gallery in Amsterdam was opened by Ralph Keuning, director of Museum de Fundatie in Zwolle. Her published book Everybody is Nobody was published in 2016, in which part of her painting is bundled. The foreword was provided by visual artist Rob Scholteand and Keuning.
In 2017 Osborn made her own program at RTL Z, Iedereen een kunstenaar, in which she makes a painting together with a well-known Dutchman. The paintings were auctioned via Catawiki and the entire proceeds went to the Youth Culture Fund (nowadays the Youth Fund Sport & Culture, of which Osborn was an ambassador. For LINDA.TV she made her own item 'Taartje met Judith', in which she interviewed politicians in their offices at Binnenhof.↵She presented the program Weekje Osborn for RTV Noord-Holland and she made a radio program for the same broadcaster. She was also active as chairman and she develops lectures about the importance of creativity within organisations, politics and society
References[edit]
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