He moved to England during the First World War and studied at the Regent Street Polytechnic[1] and, from 1916-1918, Slade School of Art.
[2] While at The Slade, Wolfe was invited by Nina Hamnett and Roger Fry to join the latter's Omega Workshops, a design enterprise founded by members of the Bloomsbury Group and established in July 1913 with the intention of providing graphic expression to the essence of the Bloomsbury ethos.
[citation needed] After his first solo exhibition in Johannesburg in 1920, Wolfe showed extensively in Britain and internationally.
He provided the frontispiece to the twelfth and last of the Furnival Books (1930-32), John Collier's Green Thoughts, with a foreword by Osbert Sitwell.
[6] The Dixson Galleries in Sydney holds one of his work which is a portrait of Randolph Hughes, Esq.