©Tracey Anderson
Jacqueline Ennis-Cole curates photography exhibitions that platform diasporic and intersectional visual stories. She is the founder and artistic director of Youth X Mentoring CIC and will serve as project lead for the ‘Uprooting Hate’ mentoring initiative. She has been appointed curator in residence at Four Corners Gallery during their Diasporic Futures Season (Oct - Nov 2026). Her curatorial practice explores intersectionality through visual storytelling. Recent socio-environmental exhibitions include Intersectional Geographies: Extraction at Martin Parr Foundation (2022), Intersectional Matter: Waste at Photo/Frome Festival (2023), Intersectional Grammar: Trees at Hackney Gallery (2024), and Mythical Masculine (2025). As editor and publisher of the Arts Council England-funded anthology Hatred is a Bitter Fruit (2025), Ennis-Cole platformed a diverse creative constituency of voices as a reparative justice intervention. She is currently a Slade School of Fine Art practice-led PhD researcher who mentors emerging artists (18-30) while co-facilitating creative workshops across East London. As Curator of Talks and Events at London Independent Photography (LIP) and facilitator of the LIP Satellite Photo Book Group, she creates spaces for intergenerational dialogue around image-making, performance, spoken word, and sound. Recent recognition includes the award of a Developing Your Creative Practice grant from Arts Council England (2025) and the Spread The Word Deaf and Disabled Writers Commission Award (2024).