GW Alliance for a Sustainable Future Celebration

 

A Celebration of the
GW Alliance for a Sustainable Future

 

 

April 17, 2024

 

Program: 6:00 pm

Lisner Auditorium
730 21st Street, NW
Washington, D.C. 20052

 

Reception: 7:30 pm

Grand Ballroom, 3rd Floor
University Student Center
800 21st Street, NW
Washington, D.C. 20052

 

 

 

Event Program

 

Student Welcome

Aleena Fayaz
SMPA ‘24

 

Greeting

Ellen M. Granberg
President

 

Welcome

Frank Sesno
Executive Director, GW Alliance for a Sustainable Future
Founding Director, Planet Forward

 

Faculty Roundtable

Christopher Alan Bracey, moderator
Provost and Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs
Professor of Law

in conversation with

Susan Anenberg
Professor and Chair, Environmental and Occupational Health Department
Director, GW Climate and Health Institute

Saniya LeBlanc
Associate Professor, Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering

David Rain
Associate Professor, Geography and International Affairs
Chair, Geography Department


Keynote

The Honorable Chris Coons
Senator for Delaware
Co-Founder and Co-Chair, Senate Climate Solutions Caucus

in conversation with Frank Sesno


Performance


Introduction

Robert Baker
Associate Professor, Performance
Director of Performance Studies

 

Sacred Place

George Washington University Singers
 

Erin Freeman, conductor
Director of Choral Activities

Jeff Kempskie, piano
Assistant Director of Choral Activities

with

Karen Johnson, violin

Kerry Van Laanen, cello

 
Sacred Place

From various sources, compiled by Alex Berko (b. 1995)

Composed by Alex Berko (b. 1995)
I. Opening Prayer

In the dusk of the river, the wind
gone, the leaves grow still—
The beautiful poise of lightness,
The heavy world pushing toward it.

Wendell Berry (b. 1934)
From “The Porch Over the River”

Simon Warner, soloist
II. Amidah

“How softly these mountain rocks are adorned, and how fine and reassuring the company they keep – their brows in the sky, their feet set in groves and gay emerald meadows, a thousand flowers leaning confidingly against their adamantine bosses, while birds bees butterflies help the river and waterfalls to stir all the air into music – things frail and fleeting and types of permanence meeting here and blending as if into this glorious mountain temple Nature had gathered her choicest treasures, whether great or small to draw her lovers into close confiding communion with her.”

 

John Muir (1838-1914) to Teddy Roosevelt
        On preserving Yosemite National Park
III. Shema

The earth says have a place, be what that place
 requires; hear the sound the birds imply
 and see as deep as ridges go behind
 each other.

The earth says every summer have a ranch
 that’s minimum: one tree, one well, a landscape
 that proclaims a universe - sermon
 of the hills, hallelujah mountain,
 highway guided by the way the world is tilted,
 reduplication of mirage, flat evening:
 a kind of ritual for the wavering.

The earth says where you live wear the kind
 of color that your life is
 and by listening with the same bowed head that sings
 draw all things into one song, join
 the sparrow on the lawn, and row that easy
 way, the rage without met by the wings
 within that guide you anywhere the wind blows.

Listening, I think that’s what the earth says.

William Stafford (1914-1993)
        From “In Response to a Question: ‘What Does the Earth Say?’”
Bella Littleton & Will Mueller, soloists
IV. Mi Shebeirach

May the source of strength
Who blessed the ones before us
Help us find the courage to make our lives a blessing
And let us say Amen

Bless those in need of healing with r'fuah sh'leimah
The renewal of body, the renewal of spirit
And let us say Amen

Traditional Jewish Prayer
        Dates to the 10th or 11th Century
Nadia Lischke, soloist
V. Kaddish

Let my thoughts come to you, when I am gone,
like the afterglow of sunset at the margin of starry silence.

Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941)
Thara Ellsworth, Owen Lubinski, Grace Rafferty & Max Weiner, soloists
VI. Closing Prayer

In the dusk of the river, the wind
gone, the leaves grow still—
The beautiful poise of lightness,
The heavy world pushing toward it.

Wendell Berry
    From “The Porch Over the River”

Will Mueller, soloist

 

University Singer Personnel

Erin Freeman, conductor
Jeff Kempskie, piano

SOPRANO

Sofia Armando
Juliana Augustine
Erica Brooks
Aurelia Colvin
Sofia Giannetto
Claudia Hull
Isabella Insignarest
Holly Jonely
Fay Khateeb
Lauren Labogin-Moses
Ella LaFrenier
Kayla Laws
Nadia Lischke
Bella Littleton
Evelyn Lowrie
Yifei (Sherry) Mao
Elizabeth Mattson
Olivia Rose
Lilly Shaw
Anusha Tandon
Florence Tian

 

ALTO

Ellen Bucalo
Faith (Ja'net) Cannon
Audrey Casper
Sophia Dethomas
Thara Ellsworth
Hannah Gluck
Selin Kilic
Kailey McNeal
Olivia Nolan
Angela Ong
Grace Rafferty
Maureen Rafter
Amelia Robinson
Paulina Timme
Ana Rose M Traore

TENOR

Henry Bauck
Ben Brindley
Kerry Han
Cameron Joseph
Will Mueller
Henry Scriven-Young

 

BASS

Jack Day
Michael Enciso
Calin Hurley
Owen Lubinski
Adam Neves
Simon Patmore
Ethan Stelmakh
Miles Stennett
Simon Warner
Max Wiener
Christian Williams
Yuwei Zhou

 

Student E-board

Christian Williams, President
Ethan Stelmakh, Secretary
Olivia Rose, Social Media & Recruitment

 

Special Thanks

Professor Robert Baker
Alex Berko
Ann Norton
Frank Sesno

 

 

 

Biographies

 

 

Susan Anenberg
Susan Anenberg

Professor and Chair, Environmental and Occupational Health Department | Director, GW Climate and Health Institute

Susan Anenberg is a Professor and Chair of the Environmental and Occupational Health Department at the George Washington University Milken Institute School of Public Health. She is also the Director of the GW Climate and Health Institute. Dr. Anenberg's research focuses on the health implications of air pollution and climate change, from local to global scales. She currently serves on the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Science Advisory Board, the World Health Organization's Global Air Pollution and Health Technical Advisory Group, and the National Academy of Science's Committee to Advise the U.S. Global Change Research Program. She also serves as President of the GeoHealth section of the American Geophysical Union. Previously, Dr. Anenberg was a Co-Founder and Partner at Environmental Health Analytics, LLC, the Deputy Managing Director for Recommendations at the U.S. Chemical Safety Board, an environmental scientist at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and a senior advisor for clean cookstove initiatives at the U.S. State Department. 

 

Robert Baker
Robert Baker

Associate Professor, Performance and Director of Performance Studies

Robert Baker has been a pillar of the Washington D.C. classical music scene for over 30 years. He has performed in over 55 productions with the Washington National Opera, including high-profile premieres of works by Phillip Glass and Jake Heggie. Other career highlights include his Metropolitan Opera debut and a Grammy-winning recording with the National Symphony Orchestra.

As an esteemed interpreter of Britten, Mr. Baker has sung the Serenade across the country. He has collaborated on over 20 premieres of new works and frequently performs contemporary music. Mr. Baker has been on the faculty of The George Washington University since 1992. His acclaimed career also includes singing with the US Air Force and major symphonies across the country. After 30+ years on stage, Mr. Baker continues to captivate audiences with his versatile artistry.

 

christopher alan bracey
Christopher Alan Bracey

Provost and Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs | Professor of Law

Christopher Alan Bracey is an internationally recognized expert who teaches and researches in the areas of the legal history of U.S. race relations, constitutional law, criminal procedure, civil procedure, and civil rights.

A magna cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa graduate of the University of North Carolina, Provost Bracey received his law degree from Harvard Law School, where he served as a supervising editor on the Harvard Law Review, a general editor on the Harvard Civil Rights–Civil Liberties Law Review, and an editor on the Harvard Blackletter Law Journal. He clerked for the Honorable Royce C. Lamberth of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, and subsequently joined the Washington, DC, Office of Jenner & Block, where he litigated a variety of civil and criminal matters.

Provost Bracey previously taught at Northwestern University School of Law and Washington University School of Law before joining the GW Law faculty in 2008. He previously served as senior associate dean and interim dean of GW Law, as well as vice provost for faculty affairs.

 

The Honorable Chris Coons
The Honorable Chris Coons

Senator for Delaware | Co-Founder and Co-Chair, Senate Climate Solutions Caucus

Chris Coons was elected to the United States Senate in 2010 following terms as New Castle County Council President and New Castle County Executive. In the Senate, he chairs the Ethics Committee, and he also sits on the Appropriations, Judiciary, Foreign Relations, and Small Business and Entrepreneurship Committees.

Chris is a pragmatic legislator eager to find bipartisan solutions to the issues confronting Delaware and the nation. In 2019, he launched the bipartisan Senate Climate Solutions Caucus with Senator Mike Braun (R-Ind.) to tackle partisan gridlock on climate issues. Senator Coons is a strong proponent of funding for climate mitigation, adaptation, and resilience programs. He has also led several pieces of bipartisan legislation, including the Energy Savings Through Public-Private Partnerships Act, Partnerships for Energy Security and Innovation Act, and the Financing Our Energy Future Act, which would take important steps to support energy efficiency and clean energy research, development, and deployment.  His PROVE IT Act, introduced with Senator Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.), would require a study of global emissions intensity to hold countries with dirty production and manufacturing accountable.

Chris graduated from Amherst College with a B.A. in chemistry and political science and earned a law degree from Yale Law School and a Master’s in Ethics from Yale Divinity School. A longtime New Castle County resident, Chris lives in Wilmington with his wife, Annie. They have three children, Michael, Jack, and Margaret.

 

Aleena Fayaz
Aleena Fayaz

SMPA ‘24

Aleena Fayaz is a fourth-year student from Houston, Texas majoring in Political Communication with a minor in Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies. After taking Professor Sesno’s Sustainability Reporting class in Fall 2022, Aleena was instantly captivated by issues of the environment, eventually leading to her joining the Planet Forward staff in Fall 2023 where she works part-time as an Engagement and Storytelling intern. Most recently, Aleena traveled with Planet Forward to Dearborn, Michigan to cover the transition to electronic vehicles at Ford Motor Company. Upon graduation, Aleena intends to pursue journalism full-time and hopes to cover stories highlighting the intersection of climate, politics, and culture.

 

Erin Freeman
Erin Freeman

Director of Choral Activities

Versatile, engaging, and spirited, conductor and artistic leader Erin Freeman serves in multiple positions throughout the District of Columbia and the Commonwealth of Virginia and maintains an international presence through guest conducting engagements. Ms. Freeman is Artistic Director of The City Choir of Washington, Artistic Director of Wintergreen Music, Resident Conductor of the Richmond Ballet, the State Ballet of Virginia, and Director of Choral Activities at George Washington University. She recently concluded successful tenures as Director of the award-winning Richmond Symphony Chorus and Director of Choral Activities at Virginia Commonwealth University.

Guest conducting engagements include the Detroit Symphony, Buffalo Philharmonic, Portland (Maine) Symphony, South Carolina Philharmonic, Charlottesville Symphony, Virginia Symphony, and additional ensembles in New York, Massachusetts, Maryland, Virginia, Georgia, Missouri, North Carolina, and Illinois. She has conducted at Carnegie Hall, Boston Symphony Hall, La Madeleine in Paris, and the Kennedy Center, and has led and/or prepared the Richmond Symphony Chorus for multiple recordings, including the 2019 GRAMMY-nominated release of Mason Bates’ Children of Adam on the Reference Recording label. After a year of creating online, interactive experiences for multiple organizations, in 2021-2022, Ms. Freeman returned to the podium in engagements with the Virginia, Portland, Detroit, Williamsburg, and Richmond Symphony Orchestras, choral preparation for the Defiant Requiem Foundation, a performance of Faure’s Requiem in Carnegie Hall with Distinguished Concerts International New York, two productions with the Richmond Ballet, and the Richmond Symphony Chorus’ 50th anniversary celebration, featuring Haydn’s The Creation. The 2022-2023 season brought appearances with the Detroit Symphony, the Toledo Symphony, the Savannah Philharmonic, the Washington Metropolitan Philharmonic Orchestra, and multiple performances with the Richmond Ballet, Wintergreen Music, and The City Choir of Washington. 

In 2023-2024, Ms. Freeman makes her debut with the New York City Ballet in George Balanchine’s The Nutcracker, The Washington Ballet as part of 10,000 Dreams – A Celebration of Asian Choreography at the Kennedy Center, and the Saint Louis Symphony Chorus, preparing Fauré Requiem for Stéphane Denève; and at Wolf Trap National Park for the Performing Arts conducting Carmina Burana with the Richmond Ballet; Cadogan Hall in London, England leading Everyday Wonders - The Girl from Aleppo by Cecilia McDowall; and the Musikverein in Vienna with Berkshire Choral International, featuring Bruckner’s Te Deum and Elgar’s The Music Makers. 

A recent finalist for Performance Today’s Classical Woman of the Year, Ms. Freeman has also been named one of Virginia Lawyers Weekly’s “50 Most Influential Women in Virginia” and an “Extraordinary Woman Leader” by the VCU School of Business. Freeman holds degrees from Northwestern University (BMus), Boston University (MM), and Peabody Conservatory (DMA).

 

Ellen M. Granberg
Ellen M. Granberg

President

Ellen M. Granberg is the 19th President of the George Washington University, a preeminent research university and the largest institution of higher education in the nation’s capital.

President Granberg is an accomplished academic leader who has a record of strengthening teaching and research excellence across disciplines, supporting a diverse and inclusive community of students, faculty, and staff, and collaborating with all stakeholders to drive transformative change and increase institutional prominence. She became the first woman to serve as GW’s President on July 1, 2023.

Previously, President Granberg served as Provost and Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs at Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT) and was a professor and senior leader at Clemson University.

As RIT’s chief academic officer, President Granberg oversaw nine colleges, two degree-granting units, and international campuses in Croatia, Dubai, Kosovo, and China. In this role, she oversaw key initiatives, including increasing undergraduate student success, expanding doctoral education, improving facilities for instruction and research, and leveraging RIT’s strengths in innovation, creativity, and cross-disciplinary collaboration to advance the university's academic mission. 

At Clemson, she was the Senior Associate Provost and Associate Provost for Faculty Affairs. She chaired the development and implementation of the institution’s strategic plan, which spurred growth in research, graduate studies, and inclusive excellence. In addition, President Granberg developed a university-wide strategy for faculty recruitment, retention, compensation, and development.

A nationally recognized scholar in the sociology of self, identity, and mental health, President Granberg began her career in academia as a Professor of Sociology.

Prior to pursuing graduate studies, she spent eleven years in the telecommunications industry, leading large integrated software development teams that replaced aging billing and customer service systems.

President Granberg holds a B.A. in history from the University of California at Davis and an M.A. and Ph.D. in sociology from Vanderbilt University.

 

Jeff Kempskie
Jeff Kempskie

Assistant Director of Choral Activities | Choral Pianist

Jeff Kempskie is active in the Washington, D.C. area as a church musician, choral conductor, pianist, organist, and singer. He has served as Director of Music and organist at St. Mark's Episcopal Church, Capitol Hill since 2010, where he directs the Chancel Choir and manages all other aspects of the music program. Mr. Kempskie has been on the faculty of The George Washington University since January 2016 and is the accompanist and assistant conductor for the University Singers. He has directed the Women's Ensemble, coached various chamber ensembles, and accompanied a variety of student recitals. Over the past few years he served as Associate Director of the Reston Chorale and Assistant Music Director for the Cantate Concert Choir. As a singer, Mr. Kempskie has sung with numerous groups including the Cantate Chamber Singers, early music ensemble Chantry, and with the choirs at Washington National Cathedral and St. Paul’s K Street.

Prior to moving to Washington, D.C., Mr. Kempskie taught choral music at the Eaglebrook School and Quabbin Regional Middle/High School while serving as organist or music director at a variety of churches of different denominations—Unitarian Universalist, Catholic, Episcopal, and Presbyterian—in Massachusetts and New York. He has been piano and organ accompanist for choirs at the Eastman School of Music, Smith College, and the University of Massachusetts Amherst. In addition, he has music-directed or played keyboard for nearly 60 musical theater productions.

Mr. Kempskie received his Bachelor’s degree in Music Education and a Master’s degree in Choral Conducting from the University of Massachusetts Amherst, studying conducting with Dr. E. Wayne Abercrombie. He also earned a Master’s degree in Organ Performance and Literature from the Eastman School of Music, where he studied with Dr. William Porter.

 

karen-johnson
Karen Johnson

Guest Violinist

As a soloist, chamber, and orchestral musician, violinist Karen Johnson’s playing has been applauded for its “balance and precision”, as well as her “enthusiastic showmanship of impressive energy and accuracy” (Washington Post) and her performances hailed as “virtuosically energized and broadly lyrical” (Richmond Times-Dispatch). In a review of a solo CD (Brioso Records) with pianist Joanne Kong, the American Record Guide stated, “It is a real pleasure to discover a violinist of the caliber of Karen Johnson… Her tone is broad and pure, her attacks are flawlessly incisive, her vibrato nicely modulated, and her intonation infallible…”

Ms. Johnson has performed in concerts throughout the United States and Europe and has worked with a variety of renowned conductors and musicians, such as James DePriest, Sergiu Commissiona, Yuri Temirkanov, Victor Yampolsky, Gerard Schwarz, and Joseph Silverstein. 

From 2002-2011, Ms. Johnson was Concertmaster of the Richmond Symphony Orchestra. In addition, she was invited as a guest concertmaster with orchestras such as the Seattle Symphony, Phoenix Symphony, and the Oregon Symphony. Ms. Johnson was recently featured as soloist at WCVE’s celebration of Robert Schumann’s bicentennial.

Ms. Johnson began her musical studies in her hometown of Gilbert, AZ, at the age of 4. At age 10, she became the pupil of Dr. William Magers at Arizona State University and under his tutelage won such competitions as the Corpus Christi International Young Artist Competition, the Midland-Odessa National Young Artist Competition, the National MTNA Yamaha String Competition. Ms. Johnson earned her Bachelor of Music degree at the Juilliard School as the pupil of Joel Smirnoff and was the first prize winner of several local and national competitions, including the Juilliard Sibelius Violin Concerto Competition. She completed her Masters degree at the University of Maryland – College Park studying with William Preucil, Concertmaster of the Cleveland Orchestra and former first violinist of the Cleveland Quartet.

Currently, Ms. Johnson is a regular performer in the Washington, D.C. area, currently as Concertmaster of “The President’s Own” United States Marine Chamber Orchestra and also as a soloist and as a chamber musician. She is a founding member of the Phillips Camerata, presenting chamber music concerts both at the Phillips Collection as well as the National Gallery of Art. Karen resides in Stafford, VA,with husband Karl Johnson and their five children.

 

saniya-leblanc
Saniya LeBlanc

Associate Professor, Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering

Dr. Saniya LeBlanc is an associate professor in the Department of Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering at The George Washington University. Her research goals are to create next-generation energy solutions leveraging advanced materials and manufacturing techniques. Prior to joining GW, she was a research scientist at a startup company where she created research, development, and manufacturing characterization solutions for power generation technologies. Previously, she was a math and physics teacher at a multicultural high school in the D.C. public school system through Teach for America. Dr. LeBlanc is a recipient of the National Science Foundation CAREER award. In 2018, the American Society of Engineering Education named Dr. LeBlanc one of its “20 Under 40” high-achieving researchers and educators, and she also received the GW Morton A. Bender Teaching Award.

Dr. LeBlanc obtained a PhD in mechanical engineering with a minor in materials science at Stanford University. She was a Churchill Scholar at University of Cambridge where she received an MPhil in engineering, and she has a BS in mechanical engineering with a minor in French from Georgia Institute of Technology.

 

David Rain
David Rain

Associate Professor, Geography and International Affairs | Chair, Geography Department

David Rain is Associate Professor of Geography and International Affairs and the Department Chair. He holds an MS and PhD in Geography from Penn State University. He is a broadly trained human geographer with interests in urbanization, environment, geospatial science and technology, population and census geography, disaster vulnerability and resilience, and geographic and environmental education. His work has been funded by the Fulbright program and the National Institutes of Health. His current research is on using geospatial tools to address environmental issues in cities of the global south. Most of his field experience has been in West Africa. He teaches Geography of Africa, Society and Environment, Cities of the Developing World, and the Senior Seminar for Geography majors.

 

 

Frank Sesno
Frank Sesno

Executive Director, GW Alliance for a Sustainable Future | Founding Director, Planet Forward

Frank Sesno serves as Director of the George Washington University Alliance for a Sustainable Future, which coordinates and amplifies the university’s teaching, research, convening, and outreach around climate change and sustainability.  The Alliance was launched in 2023 to increase the impact of the university’s work addressing climate change and sustainability and educating the next generation of environmental leaders.

An Emmy-award winning journalist, Mr. Sesno is a professor in GW’s School of Media and Public Affairs, which he led as director from 2009 to 2020, and where he teaches classes on environmental reporting. He is the founding director of Planet Forward, a multi-media platform that publishes stories by college students around the world about ideas and innovation to “move the planet forward.” Mr. Sesno is host of Maryland Public Television’s annual Chesapeake Bay Summit and has hosted programs for New York Public Broadcasting on climate change and sea level rise.

Author of Ask More: The Power of Questions to Open Doors, Uncover Solutions, and Spark Change, Mr. Sesno teaches the art of the interview, helping students learn how outcome-driven inquiry, purposeful questioning, and active listening can lead to better journalism through discovery, understanding, and empathy.

Mr. Sesno’s diverse career spans more than four decades in journalism, including 21 years at CNN, where he served as White House correspondent, anchor, Sunday talk show host, and Washington Bureau Chief. In those roles, he covered presidential campaigns and political conventions, superpower summits and arms negotiations, wars in the Mideast and Latin America.  He was at the Berlin Wall when President Reagan declared, “Mister Gorbachev, tear down this wall,” and on the West Front of the Capitol when Barack Obama was sworn in as America’s first Black president.  He led CNN’s D.C. coverage as Washington Bureau chief after the 9/11 attacks, and produced and reported a documentary about America’s brittle energy supply lines after Hurricane Katrina. 

Mr. Sesno has interviewed five U.S. presidents and engaged with some of the world’s leading figures in politics, business, science, and culture including Bill Gates, Hillary Clinton, Colin Powell, Walter Cronkite, Benjamin Netanyahu, Nancy Pelosi, and Anthony Fauci.  He has moderated a wide range of conversations and worked with many influential organizations including the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the Kavli Foundation, The White House Historical Association, and the Hospice Foundation of America.

Before joining CNN, Mr. Sesno worked as a radio correspondent for the Associated Press at the White House and in London. He has won several prestigious journalistic awards, including an Emmy, several cable ACE awards, and an Overseas Press Club Award.

Mr. Sesno serves on the board of directors of the Global Council for Science and the Environment and is a member of the Poynter Institute’s National Advisory Board. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and serves as an emeritus trustee of his alma mater, Middlebury College from which he holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in American History.  He holds three honorary degrees in recognition of his work in journalism and civil discourse.

In 2023, GW alumni Ted and Meredith Segal generously endowed The Sesno Series, which convenes high level conversations at the university about issues concerning American democracy and civil discourse. 

 

Kerry Van Laanen
Kerry Van Laanen

Guest Cellist

Praised for her “beautifully expressive” playing, cellist Kerry Van Laanen has performed with the Washington, DC area’s top ensembles since 1985. As an opera musician, she plays regularly with the Washington National Opera (including for the complete 2016 Ring cycle), the Wolf Trap Opera, and the Maryland Lyric Opera. As a symphonic musician, she appears with the National Philharmonic, National Gallery Orchestra, PostClassical Ensemble, and National Symphony Orchestra.

A highly sought-after chamber musician, she has performed at the Spoleto Festival in Italy and at the Mendocino Festival, as well as at the Kennedy Center and Strathmore. She spent several seasons presenting the entire Beethoven and Bartok string quartets with the Beethoven Cycle Quartet. With the tango ensemble QuinTango, she recorded and toured across the United States. She is a founding member of the Columbia String Quartet, which recently gave recitals at the Lyceum and Smithsonian and participated in the National Symphony Orchestra’s In Your Neighborhood program. She has also performed several times at the Kennedy Center’s Millennium Stage, most recently with the Prism Piano Trio of which she is a founding member.

As a soloist, Ms. Van Laanen has appeared with the Oklahoma Symphony, the Catholic University Orchestra, and the National Philharmonic. 

Ms. Van Laanen has been on the faculty at Cello Speak and the National Philharmonic’s Summer String Institute. She maintains an active private teaching studio in Rockville, Maryland.