Haitian, b. 1978

Fabiola Jean-Louis

CV

Artist Fabiola Jean-Louis, Wolfgang Gallery

Fabiola Jean Louis moved to Brooklyn, NY at a young age. While attending the High School of Fashion Industries, her passion for the arts flourished. Fabiola discovered her talent for photography many years later in November 2013 while on a journey of artistic rediscovery. She began taking self-portraits as a matter of convenience, shyness, and because she knew how to convey the stories she wanted to tell using her body. Later, her work grew to include other subjects, and costumes, as well as sculptures made entirely out of paper. Today, her practice is focused on experimentation through the use of different techniques, disciplines, and even art styles.

While her images have been described as "magical, moody, and mysterious", Fabiola's body of work is also that of visual activism as she challenges the hegemony of society. Simultaneously, her goal is always to capture something that is not necessarily tangible in our world…Something that is beyond our humanity, and perhaps even pure.

Her love of Afro-futurism, science/ science fiction, pre and post industrial eras, elves, fairies, and history and folklore, are also central themes in her work. Her series, Rewriting History, a body of work consisting of period paper gowns, painterly photographs, and Polaroids, opened as a solo exhibition at Smithsonian affiliates, DuSable Museum of African American History, and Andrew Freedman Home to critical acclaim. It also earned her acceptance into the highly sought after residency at the Museum of Art and Design (MAD), New York City, and in September 2019, LUX Museum, San Diego. Fabiola was invited to join and participated in a BRIC Media group exhibition, Bordering the Imaginary: Art from the Dominican Republic, Haiti, and their Diasporas. In 2021, The Metropolitan Museum of Art commissioned a paper sculpture for a two year exhibition, “Before Yesterday We Could Fly: An Afrofuturist Period Room''. It debuted on November 5th, 2021 - making her the first Haitian, female artist to show in the prestigious institution. That same year, the Yale Beinecke Rare Books and Manuscripts Library, acquired Jean-Louis’s entire Rewriting History print collection - along with three paper sculptures. 

Fabiola now sets her sights on entirely new projects beyond Rewriting History that include short films, pottery, large scale installations, and a new photographic series titled, “Atonement”. Her works have been featured in the New York Times, Architectural Digest, Vogue, Elle Decor, Huffington Post, Chicago Tribune, Modern Luxury, Artnet News, Art Critical, Hyperallergic, Atlanta Art Constitution, Chicago Sun Times, The Fashion Journal, The Haitian Times, and more. Her paper dress sculpture, “Justice of Ezili”, is on view at the Metropolitan Museum until 2023.

Featured Works

Study of a Girl, 2020

  • Archival pigment print on hot press bright paper from Polaroid

    26 × 20 in

    Edition of 10

    Inquire

Harmony, 2020

  • Archival pigment print on hot press bright paper

    26 × 20 in

    Edition of 10

    Inquire

Exhibitions

Coming soon…

Previous
Previous

Adéla Janská

Next
Next

Lucy Luckovich