Career
Born Celia Elizabeth Prince, she began painting Australian wildflowers early in her artistic career. She first began painting Banksias after seeing a Banksia serrata near her home in Orbost, Victoria. Her first exhibition was at Leveson Gallery in Melbourne in 1965, and included three watercolours of Banksia species.
Two years later she published Wildflowers of Victoria.
In 1970, Rosser was appointed Science Faculty Artist at Monash University. She illustrated Peter Bridgewater"s The Saltmarsh Plants of Southern Australia and The Mosses of Southern Australia by George Scott and Ilma Grace Stone.
In 1974 she was appointed University Botanical Artist, and began the project of painting every Banksia species. The project took over 25 years to complete, and resulted in the publication of a three volume monograph entitled The Banksias, with accompanying text by Alex George.
Publication of the final volume in 2000 represented the first time that such a large genus has been entirely painted.
Monash University awarded her an honorary Master of Science degree in 1981, and an honorary Doctor of Philosophy in 1999. In March 1978 a chance seeding of Banksia canei with deeply lobed leaves and a prostrate habit was registered as a cultivar by Alf Salkin under the names "Banksia "Celia Rosser"" and "Banksia canei "Celia Rosser"". In 2001, Peter Olde and Neil Marriott published a description of a new Banksia species from the arid shrubland of Western Australia, naming it Banksia rosserae in Rosser"s honour.