Leah Gordon (b. 1959, Ellesmere Port, UK) is a British artist, photographer, curator, filmmaker, and writer whose practice combines long-term documentary, archival research, and socially engaged art. Gordon’s work focuses on histories often omitted or misrepresented, including the trans-Atlantic slave trade, Caribbean plantation life, the British Enclosure Acts, and the formation of working-class culture in Britain. She is particularly noted for exploring how ritual, carnival, folk culture, and grassroots religion act as vessels of memory, resistance, and identity. Gordon co-directs the Ghetto Biennale in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, an alternative arts festival that creates a platform for artists marginalized from mainstream global art circuits.
Her photographic work is attentive to the ethical dimensions of representation, emphasizing collaboration, oral history, and long-term engagement with communities. Gordon’s series Kanaval documents over 25 years of Haiti’s Jacmel carnival, capturing the spiritual, political, and revolutionary dimensions of masquerade through striking black-and-white portraiture. This project also inspired her award-nominated documentary Kanaval: A People’s History of Haiti in Six Chapters, further blending archival, narrative, and performative approaches to history. Recurring themes in Gordon’s work include colonialism and its legacies, racial and class histories, ritual and masquerade, and the politics of collective memory. Her projects frequently juxtapose the historical and the contemporary, the public and the intimate, and foreground spaces where memory, creativity, and resistance intersect.
Major exhibitions include solo presentations of Kanaval at the Museum of Contemporary Art North Miami and Ed Cross Fine Art, and group shows at the Museum of Contemporary Art Sydney, Dak’Art Biennale, the National Portrait Gallery UK, Norton Museum of Art Florida, and documenta fifteen in Kassel. She has co-curated PÒTOPRENS: The Urban Artists of Port-au-Prince in New York and Miami, and Kafou: Haiti, History & Art at Nottingham Contemporary. Recent shows include Museum Van Loon in Amsterdam, UMOCA in Salt Lake City, Musée du quai Branly in Paris, and Monument to the Vanquished Peasant at Herbert Art Gallery & Museum, Coventry Biennial 2025, reflecting her sustained exploration of marginalized histories and collective imagination.