Drue Kataoka
Drue Kataoka

Rotary Foundation
Drue Kataoka Arts Scholarship Recipients

Drue Kataoka Arts Scholarship

The Drue Kataoka Art Scholarship has touched young people in the visual arts, dance, music, creative writing and art conservation. Past recipients have already begun to make an impact with their areas of artistic expertise. In their own voices, these talented young artists share what the scholarship has meant to them.

Quotes from Drue Kataoka Art Scholarship Recipients

Caroline Roberts, Drue Kataoka Arts Scholarship Recipient 2002

"The Drue Kataoka Arts Scholarship has helped inspire me to pursue my love of the art and its preservation, in its belief that art provides a way of learning that values the uniqueness of the way each of us sees things...I am grateful to the scholarship for encouraging young people in their love of the arts. It seems to me that art, in all its forms, has the power to inspire change. Discovering the various ways of looking at a painting--from spotting it in a textbook to gazing at it through the lens of a microscope--can lead to new ways of looking at the world."

Caroline Roberts, Smith College (2002)
Maxwell DeCurtins, Drue Kataoka Arts Scholarship Recipient 2003

"I found the Drue Kataoka Scholarship to be an invaluable boost to my decision to major in music; as I mentioned before, I found that the scholarship gave me precisely the encouragement that anyone in the arts would need, especially since we are so often driven to self-doubt by the at-times impossibly huge task of establishing our identities as artists."

Maxwell DeCurtins, University of Santa Barbara (2003)
Caryn Ice, Evergreen State College (2004)

"My first introduction to Drue was 6 years ago when she visited my middle school (Hillview) and she spoke about her experience as an artist. I firmly believe that it is often the little things like that, that make such a difference in someone's life. As a 6th grader I was inspired that day but little did I know that several years later I would eventually win the scholarship in her name. It used to be that I would look at professional artists and think, wow, I want to do that. But now, I realize that's just what I am doing. Everyday I am at college, I become even more appreciative of the scholarships, particularly the Rotary's DK Art Scholarship, that allowed me to be here. I really would not be able to do 'wonderful' things without the help and contributions of so many other people.

It is unusual to find support for rare art forms. My deepest concern is keeping alive Irish art forms that are disappearing or fading into the past. Receiving the DK Art Scholarship acted as reinforcement for the fact that I can succeed as an artist, and it really gave me a boost of confidence not to be afraid to pursue my passion for my art, modern Irish step dancing, Sean Nós (old style) dancing and singing."

Caryn Ice, Evergreen State College (2004)
Caryn Ice, Drue Kataoka Arts Scholarship Recipient 2005

"The Drue Kataoka Arts Scholarship has inspired me to pursue my passion in the arts--specifically in singing and theater. In these times I think it is vital to reach out to young people in support of the arts in order to cultivate creativity and an awareness of self and community. I am lucky to have received this scholarship, which for me embodies not only achievement in the arts, but imagination and dedication to the arts as well."

Emily Borromeo, Brown University (2005)
Elyse Moore, Drue Kataoka Arts Scholarship Recipient 2006

"Receiving the Drue Kataoka Arts Scholarship was really the first validation I received for my artwork as a serious endeavor. I was overwhelmed by the novel concept that my passion could, in fact, blossom into something I chose to do "for a living." It was also a wonderful acknowledgment of my desire to combine my two artistic loves; poetry and painting. More than a year after receiving this notable award, this scholarship will have influenced my direction; it has encouraged all of my successes. Thank you for the simple reassurance that doing what you love, no matter what that subject is, sometimes does pay off."

Elyse Moore, Middlebury College (2006)
Megan Putnam, Drue Kataoka Arts Scholarship Recipient 2007

"Being the 2007 award recipient for the Drue Kataoka Arts Scholarship was an exceptional honor as the pool was very competitive this year. For me the scholarship represents many things. It represents my testimony to becoming a professional artist and pursuing a career in a very competitive field. I have chosen to be a vehicle of the arts and share it with my communities, which are now both the East, and West Coast communities. The DKAS also represents a fusion of this East and West for me. It is bringing the appreciation of art, which the East coast proudly displays in New York, to the Bay Area and encourages the Bay's artists to grow. It also represents the mentoring and recognition of young artists and their talents. Drue is encouraging these hopeful youths to live their dreams and foster their creative minds. I thank Drue for providing me with such support and for her unending encouragement and enthusiasm. Good luck to future applicants!"

Megan Putnam, New York University (2007)
Sydney Hessel, Drue Kataoka Arts Scholarship Recipient 2008

"I am so thankful to have received this scholarship—it is a great honor, and one whose mission I can only hope and try to carry on in the future. I believe with all my heart that art has the power to change individuals and communities, and by being a carrier of the messages embodied by art, one can serve others in the deepest of ways.

Because of this belief, I started my own community service effort, The Crane Campaign, with the mission of using origami paper cranes to improve facility environments and spread hope to people of all ages through teaching crane-folding, and displaying sets of 1000 cranes. I know that the Drue Kataoka Arts Scholarship was started in response to the tragedy of 9/11, and in the same way the Crane Campaign began in connection with the story of Sadako Sasaki, a young girl who died of leukemia as a result of the WWII bombings in Hiroshima, but whose determination to fold paper cranes and courageous spirit inspired the building of a monument in the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park, and continues to encourage people worldwide to send sets of 1000 cranes to Japan today. The Crane Campaign is based on a mission to continue artistic traditions for peace, and hope in a modern world that can sometimes appear dark. This parallel is encouraging, and powerful. It teaches that creative work can and does make a difference.

I will also continue work on my own painting and the study of art history in the future, with the hope of building a career as an artist or curator, and as an individual for social change through the arts. I am the girl who spends long nights on canvases, loves to learn about Frida Kahlo, and believes truly that expression can act as an answer to many of the world's problems.

Thank you especially to Drue for this profound support."

Sydney Hessel, Vassar College (2008)