Studio portrait at the Wassaic Project, June 2019.Image Courtesy of Jeffrey Barnett-winsby.

Studio portrait at the Wassaic Project, June 2019.

Image Courtesy of Jeffrey Barnett-winsby.

Charlotte Woolf (she/they, b. 1990) is a queer artist and educator specializing in photography and gender studies. Her practice explores the societal impacts of infrastructure, encompassing buildings, bodies, labor, and food.

Woolf holds an MFA from Purchase College, SUNY, and a BA from Kenyon College.

Woolf has worked as a photographer around the United States, including New York City, Chicago, Park City, and Charlotte.

She has been an artist in residence at ACRE (IL), SOMA (CDMX), The Wassaic Project (NY), and ChaNorth (NY). Woolf has exhibited at the International Center of Photography, ACRE Projects, AIR Gallery, and Equity Projects; and has been included in curatorial projects such as the Every Woman Biennial, For Freedoms, Queer As I, and Slow Exposures. Her work has been featured in the New York Times, Village Voice, Oxford American, and F-Stop Magazine. She received an Honorable Mention for the Lenscratch Student Prize and gave the keynote address for Lavender Graduation at Kenyon College. She has lectured at the Aperture Foundation, CUE Arts Foundation, The Gund Annex, and the Neuberger Museum.

Woolf runs her own photography business, Charlotte Woolf Photography, and teaches art to students of all ages. She previously lectured at SUNY-Purchase College and was a Visiting Assistant Professor of Art at Kenyon College.

Woolf is an Assistant Professor of Studio Art at Georgia State Perimeter College in Atlanta, GA.

They have two black pugs named Peach and Blueberry Cobbler.