Lola Akinmade Åkerström

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Lola Akinmade Åkerström
Occupations
  • Photographer
  • Travel writer

Lola Akinmade Åkerström is a Nigerian photographer, speaker, travel storyteller and an international author whose books are published in 18 languages.[1] She is based in Stockholm, Sweden.[2] Her work focuses on culture, tradition, and lifestyle.[1]

She is a Hasselblad Heroine and 2018 Bill Muster Travel Photographer of the Year.[3] In January 2024 her novel, Everything is Not Enough, earned a nomination in the Outstanding Literary Work at the NAACP Awards.[4] Åkerström is represented by Craig Literary[5] for book and film rights through Jessica Craig.[6][7] Some of her articles and photography have been syndicated on MSNBC, Slate, Yahoo, New York Daily News, Chicago Sun Times, Huffington Post, and Time Warner, and many more.[8]

She started her early life in Lagos state in southwest Nigeria, where she completed her early schooling before relocating to the United States at the age of 15.[9] She studied Geography Information System (GIS) and holds a master's degree in information systems at the University of Maryland.[10][11] At the age of 19, she gained admission to the University of Oxford in England but failed to pursue it because of funding issues. In 2006, Åkerström relocated to Sweden with her husband.[9]

Career

Her work focuses on culture, tradition, and lifestyle.[1] Åkerström started her career as a field journalist at Eco-Challenge.[12] She worked for 12 years as a GIS developer before becoming a professional photographer.[13] Between 2006 and 2007, she joined Matador Network and worked as an editor.[10] In October 2009 she resigned her appointment at the GIS world to pursue her passion.[10] In June 2011, Åkerström contested in a pre-selection program organised by Quark Expeditions to pick a writer that will be traveling to the North Pole for the project of documenting its ecosystem.[14] In 2012 she participated in the expedition race in Fiji, where she started the combination of her traveling, photography and writing skills.[15] In 2016, she visited the Italian Unesco World Heritage Sites of Sabbioneta and Mantua for exploration.[2]

She has dispatched from more than 80 countries[16] and her work has appeared in publications, online and in print, including National Geographic Traveler, BBC, and CNN, The New York Times, The Guardian, Travel + Leisure, Lonely Planet, Vogue, BBC World Service, National Geographic Traveler, Travel Channel's World Hum, San Francisco Chronicle, Forbes Traveler, Sherman's Travel, Fodors.com, ISLANDS Magazine, United's Hemispheres, AFAR, Guardian UK's Been There, Smithsonian.com, City Magazine, The Away Network, Transitions Abroad, and The Matador Network.[17][1][18] [19][20] She has collaborated with brands such as Dove, Mercedes Benz, Intrepid Travel, Electrolux, and National Geographic Channel.[21]

Her photography is in the National Geographic Image Collection and she is a member of Women Photograph and Wonderful Machine.[22] She was recognized as one of the Most Influential People of African Descent (MIPAD) in Media & Culture, and she runs her own online academy, Geotraveler Media Academy, dedicated to storytelling.[1]

She lives in Sweden, teaches travel writing and is the current editor-in-chief for Slow Travel Stockholm.[23] She describes her writing as raw, real, and transparent, while her photography is filled with contrast, representing joy and hope.[24]

Personal life

In an interview with The Republic, she said that Black womanhood is not a monolithic experience and highlighted her experience raising biracial children in Sweden.[25] She is a mother and a wife.[26]

Awards

References

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