Lola Van Wagenen — Director of Clio Visualizing History

Public education has been the main focus of Lola Van Wagenen’s professional and intellectual life since 1970. Over the last 30 years she has both founded and served as executive officer, adviser, or board member for numerous educational and public interest organizations.

In 1970, Van Wagenen co-founded Consumer Action Now, a not-for-profit education organization in New York City. CAN established a variety of consumer-environmental education programs to demonstrate the relationship between consumer buying habits and the environment. For more than a decade she worked to advance environmental and women’s issues.

After completing her Ph.D. in American history, Van Wagenen co-founded Clio Inc., Visualizing History. She hoped to integrate her experience in education and public interest with her academic background—to bring American history to a broad public audience and meet the growing need for innovative history education projects in multiple media platforms.

In 2002, Clio changed its corporate structure from a company that provided services and developed projects for clients to a not-for-profit organization that focuses exclusively on its own American history educational projects through documentary films, the World Wide Web and other new media projects.

With Clio, Van Wagenen served as an executive producer for Miss America: A Documentary Film, which aired on the PBS “The American Experience” in January 2002 and December 2004. She currently serves as the executive producer for Catching the Shadow: Women at Photography in the 19th Century, which has received scripting funds from the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Lola Van Wagenen has been appointed to a variety of national organizations and committees that work on behalf of women, children, history, and the environment. She has served as a commissioner for United Nations International Year of the Child, a board member for the U.S. Committee for UNICEF, and a board member for the National Audubon Society. Currently she serves on the board of Shelburne Farms and is a trustee of the Vermont Historical Society.