• American, b. 1972 Lives and works in Berkeley, CA Lena Wolff is an interdisciplinary visual artist, craftswoman and activist for...
    Photo: Elise Morris

    American, b. 1972 

    Lives and works in Berkeley, CA 

     

    Lena Wolff is an interdisciplinary visual artist, craftswoman and activist for democracy. Working with tactile processes in a wide range of material approaches, her practice extends out of American folk art traditions while at the same time being connected to minimalism, geometric abstraction, Op art, social practice, feminist and political art. Her broad but interconnected artistic output includes drawing, collage, sculpture, text-based works, performance, music, and public projects. 

     

    For several years, Wolff has been exploring an interdisciplinary series works of rooted in the visual iconography of American quilts, including line drawings, collages of hand-cut and painted papers, wood sculpture, concrete, embroidery, and public projects. Combining known and obscure quilt patterns with symbols for social justice, motifs from nature, and the larger universe, the artist taps into a shared visual language that embodies collective imagination as much as individual ingenuity. In mining the archives of American craft traditions, Wolff connects to a lineage of makers and participates in an artform that is emblematic of the national ideals of democracy—while positing a vision of a more just future. 

     

    Wolff’s work has been presented in museums including the de Young Museum, San Francisco, CA; Legion of Honor Museum, San Francisco, CA; Berkeley Art Museum, CA; Kala Art Institute, Berkeley, CA; Headlands Center for the Arts, Marin, CA; and Mathis Art Gallery at University of Wisconsin- Milwaukee, WI. Her work is in the public collections of the Berkeley Art Museum, CA; Cleveland Clinic, OH; Oakland Museum of California, CA; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, CA; Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA; and University of Iowa Museum, Iowa City, IA, among others. In addition, she has generated several projects that contribute to public dialog and civic engagement, including a widespread anti-hate poster campaign and a national public art initiative to boost voter participation.

     
  • Works
    • Lena Wolff A New Sun, 2021 Screenprint 18 x 18 inches
      Lena Wolff
      A New Sun, 2021
      Screenprint
      18 x 18 inches
    • Lena Wolff Midnight Dahlia, 2021 Screenprint 13 x 13 inches
      Lena Wolff
      Midnight Dahlia, 2021
      Screenprint
      13 x 13 inches
    • Lena Wolff Radiant Star #1, 2022 Screenprint 20 x 20 inches
      Lena Wolff
      Radiant Star #1, 2022
      Screenprint
      20 x 20 inches
    • Lena Wolff Radiant Star #2, 2022 Screenprint 20 x 20 inches
      Lena Wolff
      Radiant Star #2, 2022
      Screenprint
      20 x 20 inches
  • Exhibitions
  • Press
  • Elise Morris, “Lena Wolff Studio Visit,” The Studio Work, May 12, 2019

    Leora Lutz, “A Pattern Language: Michelle Grabner, Angie Wilson and Lena Wolff,” Whitehot Magazine, August, 2014

    DeWitt Cheng, “Piece Work: Lena Wolff and friends occupy Berkeley,” East Bay Express, November 23, 2011

    Dewitt Cheng, “Lena Wolff at Traywick Contemporary, Berkeley, California,” Visual Art Source, 2011