Naomi Harris

[5] The project, called "Haddon Hall Hotel", received the 2001 "International Prize for Young Photojournalism" from Agfa and Das Bildforum in Germany.

The project was published as the monograph America Swings (2008), edited by Dian Hanson and with an interview by artist Richard Prince.

[9] The photos were shown in an exhibit at North York Centre in Toronto and covered in Canadian news media such as Maclean's magazine.

[10][11] Regarding issues of cultural appropriation and globalization, Harris's EUSA exhibition took place at the Circuit Gallery in Toronto from August 27-September 19, 2015.

[13][14] Harris photographed a rockabilly festival in Hungary and Viking themed "Danish Days" in California, among other events.

[15] Stating that each thematic setting had inaccuracies, Harris added that "it becomes a sentimental and idealized depiction—an homage to a heritage that isn't one's own.

She was on assignment for Vice magazine, beginning her journey in Washington D.C. and driving southwards, then westwards back up to Niagara Falls.

Wearing period clothing, she recreated the 19th-century canoe trips taken by painter Frances Anne Hopkins and her travelling companions, local fur traders.