Grace is a passionate explorer and entrepreneur with extensive work experience in Arctic and Antarctic expedition logistics, communications, and research. Since graduating from Princeton University, Grace has worked extensively in both Poles as a logistics manager, educational director, researcher, and journalist. In 2024 alone, Grace not only was one of the youngest women to manage a camp on the Antarctic interior, where she had the chance to visit the geographic South Pole, she also voyaged to the geographic North Pole as an Arctic Research Foundation journalist and WINGs Flag Carrier. 

In January 2025, she returned from a WINGs Flag expedition to Antarctica to document climate change through the intersection of art, science, and environmental storytelling, collaborating with The Polar Collective and esteemed scientists to explore sustainable tourism and conservation initiatives while comparing historical and contemporary visual records of the polar regions.

Her writing and research has spanned many topics, from Inuit culture in the Arctic, to the way in which we can use the art historical and/or visual record of the polar regions to show climate change and perceptual shifts, to creating clear and concise science communications for the masses. Grace is currently pursuing her Masters in Sustainability Management at Columbia University in NYC and works as a freelance journalist and creator for The Arctic Research Foundation, Climate & Capital, the Polar Collective, and more. In her spare time she runs the Next Generation of Exploration Network at the Explorers Club, where she is a member, and consults a variety of climate and human rights nonprofits on ways to engage the next generation of activists, advocates, and change-makers.