Project on the genetic pathways of breast cancer—a particularly pertinent study, given Lois’ battle with the disease. At the time, Trevino was a computer scientist at Arizona State University.
Awardee Database
Awardees
Andrew Bearnot
Project on glass art and manufacture in early 20th-century Sweden, conducted first at Linnaeus University and then at the Swedish Glass Research Institute in in Växjö. Bearnot holds a BFA from the Rhode Island School of Design and and BS from Brown University in materials engineering. His Roth Foundation award allowed him to visit glassworks in Germany and the Ambiente-Frankfurt trade show, attended by glass producers from around the world.
Anna Christina Hersey
Project on the Swedish art song repertoire and Swedish diction, conducted at the Swedish Royal College of Music. Her Roth Foundation award allowed Hersey to travel from Sweden to Chicago to present her findings at the annual conference of the American Choral Directors’ Association. Since her return, she has developed a conductor’s guide to promote knowledge about Swedish song and diction. See www.annahersey.com/scandinavian-song/
Emma Abby
Project on environmental studies and sustainability science at Lund University
Erika Larsen
Photography project on the social world of hunting and reindeer herding among the Sámi people of northern Scandinavia. While she was in Sweden, work from this series in the magazine D2, in an exhibit of experimental media in Moscow and at the Etnografiska Museet in Stockholm; these were followed by a solo exhibit in Korea at the Seoul Center of Visual Art BODA. The project culminated in an impressive November 2011 photo essay in National Geographic. See: www.erikalarsenphoto.com.
This second of twelve portraits in 2017, honoring alumni from thirty years of Roth Foundation programs, features photographer Erika Larsen. You can see Erika’s amazing work at www.erikalarsenphoto.com.
Erika won a Project Support Award while she was a Fulbrighter in Sweden in 2010, working on a photography project on the social world of reindeer herding among the Sámi people of northern Scandinavia. Her Roth Foundation award helped her take advantage of a series of opportunities to share her work: in the magazine D2; in an experimental media exhibit in Moscow; at Stockholm’s Ethnographic Museum, Jokkmokk’s Ajtte Museum and the Gällivare Museum; and in a solo exhibition at Galleri Kontrast. This project culminated in a photo essay in National Geographic (Nov 2011) and a monograph entitled Sami, Walking with Reindeer (2013).
This month, Erika wrote us some thoughts on her work and the importance of our award:
“I have always been motivated and inspired by visual language as a storytelling component. I strive continually to understand and challenge myself in the execution of that language and my intentions as a storyteller. I undertook a BFA in Photographic Illustration and an MFA in Computer Graphics and Film/Video at the Rochester Institute of Technology. In terms of training, however, I believe the most influential and formative elements have always come from my life experiences. In this spirit, I have extended my education by studying language development in Norway and Peru.
“In 2010, the Roth Foundation gave me the financial support I needed to expand parts of my project into exhibitions. This is integral and crucial to the creation process… because if you don’t have the means to get your work out and circulating, you have only accomplished part of the storytelling process.
“The projects I take on—with National Geographic and otherwise—tend to come from an innate curiosity. I seek to explore our human connection to the natural world, as these are expressed through culturally unique elements, including ritual, spirituality, language, adornments and customs, and family and worldviews.
“The stories I work on pervade all aspects of my life. It is inevitable that I become a part of those stories, to varying degrees, in order to try to grasp and understand what I am learning. The themes I focus on thus enter my artistic, social and professional endeavors equally. This would be most evident in the longer stories I have worked on:
- Sami, Walking with Reindeer, an intimate look at how reindeer herders relate to the arctic landscape;
- People of the Horse, focusing on the role of the horse in modern day Native America;
- Gifts from the Tundra, about how one Yupik community on the Bering sea relates to climate change and land erosion, as it reveals voices of the past and shapes the future;
- and, most recently, Science of Belief, about the Placebo Effect—how it aides and/or hinders our healing potential as humans—and the major role that culture and customs play in the healing process.
“On a personal level, the work I do can often isolate me within the worlds I am working in, within the story context. That’s a big reason why receiving support from the Roth Foundation (and sources like it) has been so important—it reminds me that the story is reaching other audiences and it aids me tremendously in my communication process.
“In general, the support given by the Roth Foundation helps amplify unique voices and visions around the globe.”
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This alumni portrait was drafted by Roth Foundation chair, Skyler Arndt-Briggs, based on a short interview with Erika Larsen. Thanks to Drew Barnhart, our Social Media and Outreach Manager, for producing this second 2017 alumni portrait!
Jean Kjellstrand
Project on Child Resilience: Pathways to Health in Sweden and the U.S.
Garrett Bucks
Project on the “Swedish Model” of international development and approach to poverty in a globalized world. His Roth Foundation award allowed Bucks to travel to Tanzania to observe Swedish projects there.
Kjersti Knox
Project on traditional Sami medicine and its interaction with the Swedish public health system. Her Roth Foundation award extended Knox’s ability to conduct interviews with traditional Sami healers and community leaders.
Elise Carlson
Project on the experience of Kurdish women in Sweden.
Jeffrey Green
Project on the philosophical paradox of useful ignorance
Mara Fridell
Project on the interplay of immigration, politics and state capacity. At the time, Fridell was at the University of Oregon.
Julianne K. Ohlander
Project re-assessing myths about suicide in Sweden.
Anna Rudberg
Project on the response of theology and religion to recent social change. At the time, geographer Rudberg was at Dartmouth College.
Alexandra Zafiroglu
Project on the shift in the daily experience of time and space brought about by the use of mobile phones. At the time, Zafiroglu was at Brown University.
Matthias Geise
Project on the contribution of the Swedish ombudsman in maintaining public trust. At the time, Geise was at Harvard University.
Kristoffer Neville
Project on 16th-century art and architecture of the Swedish Reformation, undertaken after Neville earned his BA at Washington and Lee University.
Jennifer Mack
Project on Swedish urban development. At the time, Mack was at MIT.
Gregory Webb
Project on Scandinavian literature. At the time, Webb was at UCLA.
Eric W. Banks
Project on contemporary choral theory and practice in Sweden. At the time, Banks was a PhD candidate at the University of Wisconsin.
Matthew Roy
Project on theoretical perspectives and representations of homosexuality in Swedish literature. At the time, Roy was a PhD candidate at the University of Washington.
Karen Anderson
Project on the international economy and the welfare state.
Susan Vroman
Project on Swedish data-gathering practices and the earning gap between men and women. At the time, Vroman was professor of economics at Georgetown University.
*The Prix Coindreau Prize, The Jeanne Varnay Pleasants Prize for Language Teaching, and the CASVA-Henry & Judith Millon Award are currently inactive.