Nadia Wolff is a Haitian-american artist, designer, writer, and a U.S. Presidential Scholar in the Arts from Miami, Florida, who is now based between Tequesta/Seminole land (South Florida) and Narragansett land (Providence, Rhode Island.) They attended the Brown University | RISD Dual Degree program, studying Textile Design, Literary Arts and Africana Studies.

Wolff’s work–which ranges from installation, textiles, performance, printmaking, and poetic interventions– contemplates queer/Black/Caribbean aesthetics, history, and embodiment through a lens of intimacy. In focusing on small scenes of abundance, we might find palpable ways to work towards a future that celebrates Black, queer existence. Wolff aims to not italicize the Kreyol within their work by creating with the intention of speaking and producing while assuming that their people are already in the room.