Robertson's best-known book is Seeing Red: A History of Natives in Canadian Newspapers,[8][9] co-written with Mark Cronlund Anderson.[10][11][12]Seeing Red is a study about how Canadian English-language newspapers portray Aboriginal people.[1][13]Seeing Red received the Saskatchewan Book Award for Scholarly Writing (2011), First Peoples' Writing (2011), and Regina Book of The Year (2011).[14]
Robertson co-edited Clearing a Path: New Ways of Seeing Traditional Indigenous Art with Sherry Farrell Racette. This book was published by Regina: Canadian Plains Research Centre in 2009 and it looks at notable Saskatchewan Metis artists.[15]
A number of Robertson's writings focus on the Aboriginal Canadian artist Norval Morrisseau,[3][4] including Norval Marisseau: A Complex but Critical Legacy.[2] In 2019, she notably testified in the Court of Appeal for Ontario on the in-authenticity of a Morrisseau painting purchased at Maslak-McLeod Gallery by collector Kevin Hearn.[16][17] This case is featured in the documentary There are no Fakes, produced by TV Ontario, in 2020.[18]
Robertson has curated a number of exhibitions in Canada, including Dana Claxton: The Sioux Project—Tatanka Oyate at the MacKenzie Art Gallery, in Regina, Saskatchewan September–January 2017 – 2018.
Robertson is a past president of the Native Heritage Foundation of Canada, where she advocated accessibility and preservation for collections of aboriginal Canadian art.[19] She also serves on the editorial board of the Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, published by Cambridge University Press.[20]
Selected bibliography
Books
Robertson, Carmen L. (2016). Mythologizing Norval Morrisseau: art and the colonial narrative in the Canadian media. Winnipeg, MB: University of Manitoba Press. ISBN978-0-88755-810-8.
Robertson, Carmen L. (2016). Norval Morisseau: Life & Work. Toronto, ON: Art Canada Institute. ISBN978-1-4871-0086-5.
Anderson, Mark Cronlund; Robertson, Carmen L. (2011). Seeing red : a history of Natives in Canadian newspapers. Winnipeg, MB: University of Manitoba Press. ISBN978-0887557279.
Robertson, Carmen; Racette, Sherry Farrell, eds. (2009). Clearing a path : new ways of seeing traditional indigenous art. Regina, SK: University of Regina, Canadian Plains Research Center. ISBN9780889772267.
Robertson, Carmen (2004). Abstraction and myth : Neal McLeod. Regina, SK: Dunlop Art Gallery. ISBN9781894882101.
Robertson, Carmen (2002). From wigwas to canvas : generations of Woodland art. Regina, SK: MacKenzie Art Gallery. ISBN9781896470467.
Robertson, Carmen (2002). From wigwas to canvas : generations of Woodland art. Regina, SK: MacKenzie Art Gallery. ISBN9781896470467.
Robertson, Carmen (1999). Le consentement. Cap-Saint-Ignace, Québec: La Plume d'oie. ISBN9782922183887.
Robertson, Carmen L. (1993). Gender relations and the Noli Me Tangere scene in renaissance Italy. s.n.] ISBN9780315843660.
Articles
"Land and Beaded Identity: Shaping Art Histories of Indigenous Women of the Flatland". Revue d'art canadienne/Canadian Art Review, Vol. 432, No. 2 : 13-29. 2017.
Robertson, Carmen L. (2012). "Thunderbirds and Concepts of Transformation in the Art of Norval Morrisseau". Journal of Canadian Art History. 33 (2): 53–70. JSTOR42616592.
Robertson, Carmen (2012). "Utilizing PEARL to Teach Indigenous Art History: A Canadian Example". Australian Journal of Indigenous Education. 41 (1): 60–66. doi:10.1017/jie.2012.9. S2CID145106585.
Fleischmann, Aloys N. M.; Van Styvendale, Nancy; McCarroll, Cody, eds. (2011). "Imaginary Citizens: The White Paper and the Whitewash in the Press". Narratives of Citizenship: Indigenous and Diasporic Peoples Unsettle the Nation State. Edmonton: University of Alberta Press. pp. 233–262. ISBN978-0-88864-518-0.
Martin, Lee-Ann (2008). Bob Boyer : his life's work / le Travail D'une Vie, with essays by Ted Godwin, Carmen Robertson, Alfred Young Man. Regina: MacKenzie Art Gallery. ISBN9781896470689.
^"Carmen Robertson". Aboriginal Curatorial Collective / Collectif des commissaires autochtones. Archived from the original on 2016-03-09. Retrieved 2016-03-08.
^Robertson, Carmen (2005). Reel artists: National Film Board of Canada portrayals of contemporary aboriginal and Inuit artists and their art (Ph.D thesis). University of Calgary. ISBN9780494046104. OCLC71816497.
^Coutre, Joe (March 2008). "Prairie Art Needs More Exposure". Windspeaker. 25 (12): 20. ISSN0834-177X.
^"Seeing Red: A History of Natives in Canadian Newspapers". Quill and Quire. 15 November 2011. Retrieved 2016-03-12. There is no denying that the new book by University of Regina professors Mark Cronlund Anderson and Carmen L. Robertson is a valuable and valiant effort.