Laura B. Kozlowski graduated from Gettysburg College with a B.A. in English
Literature and Studio Art. In 1998, after attending the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in
Boston, Laura turned her passion for photography into a business and opened her first
studio in South Boston, Massachusetts.
During the advent of digital photography, Laura began educating others on how to make the
transition from film to pixels. It was in 1999, when she made the transition to digital
photography and helped the Boston Public Library launch their digital library for their
extensive collection of artwork and literature with their first digitally photographed
publication “American Art & Architecture of the Boston Public Library”.
In addition to photographing for Cornell’s Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, where she has
had her images published in: Edward Metzgar’s Gem Collection, A Room of Their Own, the
Bloomsbury Artist in American Collections, and Colored in the Years New Light: Japanese
Surimono from the Becker Collection, her photography has been recognized nationally as well
as internationally through a wide range of clients such as : Met Life, Equifax, Reebok, Cornell
University, Harvard University, Time Life Books, The Art Museum of New York, ButcherBox,
Concord Museum, and BP Lightsource ….
In her spare time she enjoys cycling and being in nature.
For more info, visit www.laurakozlowski.com
Laura Kozlowski
Henriette is the fifth generation of her family to live in the house in Papingo that will be the home of the Krouna Writing Workshop. Since she was an English major at Middlebury College and visiting family during the summers, she dreamed of holding writing workshops in the courtyard where the views of the Astraka cliffs and the peaceful setting of the unique village could inspire writers. In July of 2018, she launched the inaugural Krouna Writing Workshop there.
Henriette's recent novel about Antarctic explorers in 1910 and the woman who loves them both, TERRA NOVA, was called "ingenious" and "provocative" by the New York Times. Her debut novel THE CLOVER HOUSE (Random House/Ballantine) was a Boston Globe best-seller and a Target Emerging Authors pick. Her other work has appeared in publications including ELLE, Forge, Narrative Magazine, Salamander, New England Review, The Millions, The New York Times, and the Huffington Post, and has earned her a Massachusetts Cultural Council Artists Grant. A Ph. D. in English, Henriette taught at Harvard for ten years and now teaches at GrubStreet in Boston.
Her third novel, LAST DAYS IN PLAKA, set in that quarter of Athens, comes out in April of 2024.
For more about Henriette, visit her website here.
Henriette is the fifth generation of her family to live in the house in Papingo that will be the home of the Krouna Writing Workshop. Since she was an English major at Middlebury College and visiting family during the summers, she dreamed of holding writing workshops in the courtyard where the views of the Astraka cliffs and the peaceful setting of the unique village could inspire writers. In July of 2018, she launched the inaugural Krouna Writing Workshop there.
Henriette's recent novel about Antarctic explorers in 1910 and the woman who loves them both, TERRA NOVA, was called "ingenious" and "provocative" by the New York Times. Her debut novel THE CLOVER HOUSE (Random House/Ballantine) was a Boston Globe best-seller and a Target Emerging Authors pick. Her other work has appeared in publications including ELLE, Forge, Narrative Magazine, Salamander, New England Review, The Millions, The New York Times, and the Huffington Post, and has earned her a Massachusetts Cultural Council Artists Grant. A Ph. D. in English, Henriette taught at Harvard for ten years and now teaches at GrubStreet in Boston.
Her third novel, LAST DAYS IN PLAKA, set in that quarter of Athens, comes out in April of 2024.
For more about Henriette, visit her website here.