Solèy
- Solèy is a creative studio and cultural organization centered on Haiti and its global diaspora. Founded in 2024 by Abigail Cherubin and Enga Domingue, Solèy was created to strengthen connections among Haitians worldwide and invite global audiences to engage with the richness of Haitian culture.
- Amidst a time of deep uncertainty for Haiti’s future, Solèy offers clarity, care, and possibility—redefining the nation’s narrative through art, storytelling, and preservation.
- Our inaugural initiative, Nou Ayiti, brings together artists from around the world to imagine Haiti beyond crisis—through reflection, reclamation, and worldbuilding.
- Solèy is building a new cultural space—one that honors the complexity of identity, amplifies Haitian voices, and affirms Haiti’s place as a global cultural force.
Nou Se Soley La.
Nou Ayiti
- This digital exhibition features over 90 works by more than 40 Haitian artists across the global diaspora, each responding to a central call to action: What is your vision for the future of Haiti? Spanning photography, textile, painting, sculpture, sound, and video, Nou Ayiti imagines new futures by assembling the creative visions of a new generation.
- Through immersive design and multimedia storytelling, the exhibition opens up a timely and urgent cultural dialogue—challenging reductive narratives and offering expansive new understandings of what Haiti is and what it can become. Nou Ayiti is produced and creative directed by Solèy and co-curated by Abigail Cherubin and Enga Domingue, with guest curator Kendra Gourgue.
Our team
Abigail Cherubin
curator
- Cherubin is a Brooklyn-based creative strategist and writer. Her career spans authentically connecting top companies like HBO, Sephora, Meta and Google with Gen Z audiences through compelling digital campaigns.
Kendra Gourgue
guest curator
- Gourgue is a Brooklyn-born and based curator, creative director, and intersectionality researcher. As an associate at CANADA Gallery, and an arts and media coordinator at Columbia Law School’s African American Policy Forum, Kendra seeks to create and proliferate expansive narratives surrounding the power of Black artistry.
John Mendoza
creative director, web designer
- Gourgue is a Brooklyn-born and based curator, creative director, and intersectionality researcher. As an associate at CANADA Gallery, and an arts and media coordinator at Columbia Law School’s African American Policy Forum, Kendra seeks to create and proliferate expansive narratives surrounding the power of Black artistry.