From 2009 to 2010, Robertson was the inaugural Visiting Artist at the Dallas Museum of Art’s Center for Creative Connections, where her Community Partner Response artwork was on exhibit in 2010; a project involving over 500 active participants in hands on workshops. The resulting exhibition, Woven Records, included an installation and two interactive looms that museum visitors wove on. In 2012, she co-launched The Mother Load, a participatory artwork and project engaging with over 100 artists from 10 countries on the intersection of motherhood and art. This project was exhibited at the Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas, Texas (2014-2015), and the Hannah McClure Centre, Dundee, Scotland (2016). This ongoing initiative has produced installation based artwork and is now evolving into a publication on how you define success a mother/artist. Most recently, she was a Fulbright Specialist in Kuwait with the Al Sadu House, (2015-2016). Over three visits, she co-curated an interactive exhibition titled Weaving Stories, engaging with the community to learn about the textile arts of Kuwait. In additional to interactive sculptural work, this exhibition included the development of a series of workshops, lectures, and educational resources. This project was supported by the US Embassy and Kuwaiti National Council of Art, Letters, and Culture.
This collaborative work directly informs her artwork, challenging her to involve and engage the community in the development of installation and sculptural works. She continues to work on independent artworks while developing interdisciplinary project based works, exhibiting these in solo and group exhibitions nationally and internationally. Robertson has lectured and participated in numerous international events and conferences including the Qurain Cultural Festival in Kuwait, European League of the Institute of the Arts, Textile Society of America Symposia, and many more. In addition, Robertson has received grants from the Dallas Museum of Art, the Surface Design Association, the Textile Society of America, and a faculty fellowship with the UNT IAA in support of her artwork and research. She currently serves on the Board of the Textile Society of America.