In 1938, she immigrated to Palestine. After resettling there, she served with the British Army and later settled in
Haifa and married the painter Yehoshua Grossbard.[3]
In 1954, she studied at the
atelier of
André Lhote in Paris. She was a member of the
Ein Hodartists' colony in Haifa and of the Artists and Sculptors Association in Israel.[2]
In 1966, "Lines and Trees," a collection of her work, was published.[2] Her work includes mountainscapes of the post-Six Day War period through the 1970s. Her later work was much more abstract.[3]
Artists Messengers of Peace at the Artists' House in Jerusalem (1996)[4]
Batia Grossbard, The Large Paintings 1979-89 at the University of Haifa, Faculty of Humanities, Gallery of Art in Haifa (December 21, 1996 - February 13, 1997)[4]
Exhibition of Struck Prizewinners at the Painters and Sculptors Association in Israel at Haifa and the North (March 15, 1997 - April 1, 1997)[4]
Women Artists in Israeli Art - The 80's at Alternative Exhibition places in Haifa (1998)[4]
Vision of Light: A Century of Watercolor in Israel at the
Israel Museum in Jerusalem (December 1, 1998 - February 28, 1999)[4]
Batia Grossbard - Works on paper at the Ein-Hod Artists' Gallery,
Janco Dada Museum in Ein Hod (October 23, 1999 - November 10, 1999)[4]
Meeting in the Atelier: Kupferman and his Teachers at The Kupferman Collection House in Kibbutz Lochamei Hagetaot (2006)[4]
Salt of the Earth - Israeli Portraits at the Wilfrid Israel Museum, Oriental Art and Studies in Kibbutz Hazorea (June 7, 2008 - September 7, 2008)[4]
Group Exhibition at Zaritsky Artists House in Tel Aviv (July 5, 2018 - July 28, 2018)[4]