About
Rebecca Fontaine-Wolf is an interdisciplinary artist whose practice centers on mirrors and self-portraiture to examine the complexities of womanhood, from its visceral realities to its broader societal implications. She has developed a distinctive physi-digital mixed-media methodology that integrates questions of identity, self-image, and digital representation directly into her working process.
Fontaine-Wolf holds a Master’s degree from the University of the Arts London, Wimbledon (2015), and a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the University for the Creative Arts (2004). She is a recipient of the Gulbenkian Creation Grant (2025), the Chelsea Arts Club Trust Award, and was a finalist for the Sovereign Portuguese Art Prize in 2024. Her works are held in major public and private collections, including the Berardo Collection and the Coleção de Arte Moderna e Contemporânea — Norlinda e José Lima (Portugal), the Collection De Gambs (Germany), and Standard Chartered Bank (UK).
She is co-founder and co-director of InFems, a feminist art collective, with whom she has curated multiple exhibitions, notably Lost Girls at Flowers Gallery during Frieze Week 2023, featuring artists such as Ai Weiwei, Maggi Hambling, and Tracey Moffatt.
Fontaine-Wolf has exhibited internationally at institutions including the V&A Museum and the Royal College of Art in London, and Haus Kunst Mitte in Berlin, where she presented her first institutional solo exhibition in 2024. Her work has been featured in major publications such as Forbes, The Guardian, and the BBC. She was highlighted in Hauser & Wirth’s Herstory series, commissioned by Carolina Herrera for International Women’s Day in 2022, and previously served as Vice-President of the Society of Women Artists.