Rose credits late CVAD Professor Emeritus Elmer Taylor for instilling a strong work ethic in her. In a recommendation letter, he once described
her art as "very intellectual."
"I hadn't thought of myself that way, but I decided to claim that and really go for
all of those super nerdy interests that I had and see how that could influence my
work."
Following graduation, Rose worked as an adjunct professor at Dallas College Richland
Campus, where she later taught full time and oversaw the ceramics program.
In 2015, she and colleague Marian Lefeld created an exhibition titled "Blood of Heroes
Never Dies." Inspired by a similar 2014 London exhibit by artist Paul Cummins, with
the help of the college's community members, the pair created 5,171 red ceramic poppy
flowers -- one for every Texas soldier killed during World War I -- that were displayed
on campus.
Rose and Lefeld also co-created the 2016 installation "In You We Trust," which featured
2,000 ceramic gold coins representing child sex-trafficking victims in Dallas. It
was shown at the Richland Campus before being exhibited in Northern California.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, Rose devised the idea for Bee Cups after seeing insects
drink water that had collected in sculptures decorating the back yard of her Dallas
home. "I thought, 'Do insects need water?' and it just kind of evolved from there,"
she says.
Following numerous "weird Google searches" -- to learn the length of honeybee tongues
and whether they have toes -- Rose developed a design for the cups and the Bee Vision
glaze.