In 1970, the program moved to Albuquerque, where it was renamed the Tamarind Institute and made a division of the University of New Mexico.
In 1970, Wayne resigned as director and the workshop moved to the University of New Mexico where, as the Tamarind Institute, it continues today.
In 1960 Alps received a fellowship to the Tamarind Institute in New Mexico, where he created a group of lithographs.
Upon the completion of his studies at the Tamarind Institute he was certified as a master printer.
A decade after its founding, the center moved to the University of New Mexico and changed its name to the Tamarind Institute.
He worked at Tamarind Institute in the 1960s and is best known for his entirely abstract paintings and lithographs.
In 1985, Marjorie Devon was appointed director of Tamarind Institute.
She created prints with the Tamarind Institute in Los Angeles.
In 1970, Tamarind Institute moved from Los Angeles to Albuquerque.
In 1970-1971, she was a visiting artist at the Tamarind Institute.