Now a professional artist, Jocelyn earned a BA in Fine Art from Skidmore College and a MFA in Printmaking from UMass, Amherst. After graduation she started a business creating portraits of horses and dogs, attending many East Coast horse shows to advertise her work. Her exceptional ability to draw has fueled her versatile career and she is internationally renowned in the equine industry. Jocelyn has completed more than 2,000 commissioned portraits of horses and dogs and her work is included in many private and corporate collections including the Kentucky Derby Museum. Her work has appeared on the covers of many publications including The Chronicle of the Horse and the magazine of the American Veterinary Medical Association. Jocelyn is accepting commissions and recently she was asked to paint four life-sized paintings of horses, including one for interior designer Darryl Carter.

A watercolor painting of two horses, one white and one dark brown, being led by a person wearing a hat, in a green field with trees in the background.

In 1990, Jocelyn’s focus evolved to include paintings of Nantucket. She is a member of the Art Association of Nantucket and exhibits her work at Nantucket Looms. Jocelyn has been the recipient of the Art Association of Nantucket’s Frank Swift Chase Award for Plein Air Painting, as well as the William Welch Painting Award.

A painting of a  scene featuring a two-story house with a dark-colored roof and multiple windows, a disconnected utility pole with wires, leafless trees, and a clear sky with some clouds, with the artist's signature 'J. Sandor' in the bottom left corner.

Jocelyn created a small greeting card company featuring her portraits as well as the humorous side of life with horses. A lifelong rider, her experiences with horses are depicted in many of the cards. She has illustrated four children’s books.

A horse at a veterinary check area speaks to a jockey and a vet, with the horse saying, 'I want a second opinion,' and the vet replying, 'You may continue.' In the background, the countryside features many jumping fences, logs, and graded terrain.