A ‘Nice Ramble’ Through Connecticut Industrial History

A ‘Nice Ramble’ Through Connecticut Industrial History

The Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford is the host of a wide-ranging exhibition, “Made in Connecticut,” that celebrates the 25th anniversary of the Connecticut Art Trail.

The show opened Oct. 15 and runs through Feb. 7.

The curator of the show is James Prosek, who wears many hats, including artist in residence at the Yale University Art Gallery.

Prosek published “Trout: An Illustrated History” in 1996, when he was a student at Yale. The book has 70 watercolors of the varieties of trout found in North America, and is a staple of any self-respecting angler’s fishing library.

His subsequent work is largely concerned with nature and human interaction with nature.

Prosek is the host of a YouTube video that provides a quick (a little under half an hour) overview of the show. (Type “James Prosek” and “Wadsworth” into the YouTube search bar, or go to the museum website, and click the link under “public programs” on the “Made in Connecticut” page.)

In the video, Prosek explains: “We wanted to do a show, not just of aggregate holdings but specific to Connecticut.”

Hence the presence of items not normally associated with art museums, such as brass buttons from Waterbury’s industrial heyday, a race car designed by the late John Fitch (a world-famous race car driver and formerly of Lime Rock, Conn., where he was a manager of the race track in its early years) and a rubber desk from Charles Goodyear.

And there is art: Lots of landscapes. Contributions from Native Americans. Paintings of the post-Civil War industrial boom and subsequent bust, showing “beautiful decrepitude.”

In a phone interview Oct. 18, Prosek said discussions about the “Made in Connecticut” show started in the summer of 2019. The show was supposed to open in June; the COVID-19 pandemic forced a change in plans.

Along the way the show got bigger, Prosek added.

Asked to sum it all up, he said the show celebrates “beautiful productions of the human mind and hand.

“It’s kind of a nice ramble, like a flea market,” he added.

Prosek was scheduled to perform musical selections online on Nov. 6 at the Wadsworth website. That show has now been postponed to early December. At present, he’s set to perform with Lindsey Fyfe. (Prosek’s on-again, off-again rock band, Troutband, is in an “off” stage.) 

”Made in Connecticut” may be viewed in person. The Wadsworth Atheneum is conducting “timed tickets,” in half hour intervals. 

Although the exhibit can’t be seen online, there have been several talks which you can watch online. 

For details on the show and on Prosek’s concert, go to www.thewadsworth.org. 

Latest News

Cornwall board approves purchase of two new fire trucks following CVFD recommendation
CVFD reaches fundraising goal for new fire trucks
Provided

CORNWALL — At the recommendation of the Cornwall Volunteer Fire Department, on Jan. 20 the Board of Selectmen voted to move forward with the purchase of two new trucks.

Greenwood Emergency Vehicles, located in North Attleboro, Massachusetts, was chosen as the manufacturer. Of the three bids received, Greenwood was the lowest bidder on the desired mini pumper and a rescue pumper.

Keep ReadingShow less
Robin Lee Roy

FALLS VILLAGE — Robin Lee Roy, 62, of Zephyrhills, Florida, passed away Jan. 14, 2026.

She was a longtime CNA, serving others with compassion for more than 20 years before retiring from Heartland in Florida.

Keep ReadingShow less
Marjorie A. Vreeland

SALISBURY — Marjorie A. Vreeland, 98, passed away peacefully at Noble Horizons, on Jan. 10, 2026.She was surrounded by her two loving children, Richard and Nancy.She was born in Bronxville, New York,on Aug. 9, 1927, to Alice (Meyer) and Joseph Casey, both of whom were deceased by the time she was 14. She attended public schools in the area and graduated from Eastchester High School in Tuckahoe and, in 1946 she graduated from The Wood School of Business in New York City.

At 19 years old, she married Everett W. Vreeland of White Plains, New York and for a few years they lived in Ithaca, New York, where Everett was studying to become a veterinarian at Cornell. After a short stint in Coos Bay, Oregon (Mike couldn’t stand the cloudy, rainy weather!) they moved back east to Middletown, Connecticut for three years where Dr. Vreeland worked for Dr. Pieper’s veterinary practice.In Aug. of 1955, Dr. and Mrs. Vreeland moved to North Kent, Connecticut with their children and started Dr. Vreeland’s Veterinary practice. In Sept. of 1968 Marjorie, or “Mike” as she wished to be called, took a “part-time job” at the South Kent School.She retired from South Kent 23 years later on Sept. 1, 1991.Aside from office help and bookkeeping she was secretary to the Headmaster and also taught Public Speaking and Typing.In other times she worked as an assistant to the Town Clerk in Kent, an office worker and receptionist at Ewald Instruments Corp. and as a volunteer at the Kent Library.

Keep ReadingShow less
Rafael A. Porro

SALISBURY -— Rafael A. Porro, 88, of 4 Undermountain Road, passed away Jan. 6, 2026, at Sharon Hospital. Rafael was born on April 19, 1937 in Camaguey, Cuba the son of Jose Rafael Porro and Clemencia Molina de Porro. He graduated from the Englewood School for Boys in Englewood, New Jersey and attended Columbia University School of General Studies. Rafael retired as a law library clerk from the law firm of Curtis, Mallet Prevost in 2002 and came to live in Salisbury to be nearer to his sister, Chany Wells.

Rafael is survived by his sister, Chany Wells, his nephew Conrad Wells (Gillian), and by numerous cousins in North Carolina, Florida, Wyoming, Arizona, Cuba and Canada. He was the eldest of the cousins and acknowledged family historian. He will be greatly missed.

Keep ReadingShow less