This weekend, stop by Rokeby Museum and experience our seasonal exhibit, "Inspired by Nature: The Women Artists of Rokeby"
See how the strikingly beautiful landscape of the Robinson farm, the ever-changing woodlands, ponds, and fields, inspired the art of Ann Stevens Robinson and her daughters Rachael Robinson Elmer and Mary Robinson Perkins.
Once you`ve admired their work, Rokeby invites you to draw inspiration from the exhibit and try your hand at your own creative expression!
Rokeby Museum will be participating in the Educator Idea Fair, Saturday, May 3rd, at the Community Sailing Center in Burlington.
This free, drop-in program, hosted by @lakechamplainmaritime, is an invitation for all classroom teachers and homeschool educators to stop by, mingle with their peers, and discuss ideas. Rokeby Museum will be on hand to offer resources and information on all our educational programming.
This 🌎Earth Day🌎, Rokeby Museum honors the work of Rowland E. Robinson (1833 - 1900); author, outdoorsman, and staunch conservationist. From 1877 until his death, RER wrote letters, essays, and articles calling for stronger fish and game laws, shaming those who violated them. When Vermont established its Fish and Game League in 1891, they elected RER as an honorary member in their very first meeting.
In 1896, RER published "In New England Field and Woods," a collection of essays dedicated to nature. A melancholy strain runs throughout the book, as RER mourns the ecological impacts of the late 19th century. This quote is taken from one essay, "A Plea for the Unprotected." It`s an eloquent call for not only stronger conservation laws but also the widespread adoption of a new conservation mindset.
Rokeby`s trail camera has caught another late-night visitor to the Red Trail, a familiar one to many Vermonters. This raccoon, one of Rowland E. Robinson`s "midnight prowlers", stopped by a few times over the course of a week. RER had many colorful nicknames for the raccoon (free-booter, robber, despoiler of cornfields), but he also had a great fondness for the animal:
"This little brother of the bear is one of the few remaining links that connects us with the old times...when all the world had not entered for the race to gain the prize of wealth, or place, or renown. [It is pleasant] to know that he survives...if he too shall not then have gone the inevitable way of all the wild world." - RER, "The Raccoon", In New England Field and Woods, 1896