Marie Wilson (painter)
Marie Wilson | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1922 |
| Died | 2017 (aged 94–95) |
| Education | Mills College, BFA University of California, Berkeley, MFA |
| Known for | surrealist paintings, drawing, ceramics |
| Movement | Surrealism |
| Spouse | Nanos Valaoritis |
Marie Wilson (1922–2017) was an American surrealist painter.[1] Wilson worked in the style of surrealism, creating paintings in oil, lithographs, drawings and ceramics.[2]
Early life and education
Wilson was born in 1922 in Cedarville, California.[3][1] She attended Mills College in the San Francisco Bay Area where she received a BFA degree in 1944. She went on to pursue a graduate degree at the University of California, Berkeley, earning an MFA in 1948.[2]
Career
In 1950, Wilson met the American artist Gordon Onslow Ford and the Turkish-born Greek artist Jean Varda in Sausalito, California.[2][4] Through these professional relationships, she became engaged with the Dynaton movement and its associated intellectual community.[2]
In 1952, Wilson moved to Paris where her work was curated into exhibitions by André Breton.The paintings were influenced by Indigenous cultures of the Americas, spirituality, and the occult.[1][5] Wilson's semi-abstract paintings incorporated geometric and biomorphic formal elements. The compositions of her later work were highly symmetrical. It has been described as having "a transcendental artistic language that was uniquely her own: a poetic, masterful, and harmonious fusion of the sacred and the surreal."[2] In Paris she met the painters, Max Ernst and Pablo Picasso, the conceptual artist, Marcel Duchamp, the sculptor Alberto Giacometti, and other modernist artists. She became interested in Zen Buddhism and Hinduism as well as the mythology of pre-Columbian cultures.[2]
The poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti organized a one-person show of Wilson's works in 1984, titled, Apparitions: The Mythical World of Marie Wilson.[2]
In 2024–2025, Her work is included in the Vital Signs exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art.[6]
In 2026, Wilson's work was presented in a solo exhibition at the San Francisco; it had been forty years since she had a solo exhibition.[1][7]
The book, The Occult, in Modernist Art, Literature, and Cinema includes a chapter on Wilson's work.[8]
Personal life
Wilson met the Greek poet, Nanos Valaoritis in 1954, who introduced her to André Breton. They collaborated on a book project in 1958 Terre de Diamant, that included 16 of Wilson's lithographs with mandala motifs which were partnered with 16 poems by Valaoritis who wrote them in response to the imagery. They were married in 1960, and moved to Greece. The couple had three children, and in 1968 moved to Oakland, California.[2]
Death and legacy
Wilson died in 2017 in Athens, Greece.[2][9]
A selection of Wilson's papers, manuscripts, works and ephemera are held in the archives and collections of André Breton.[10]
References
- ^ a b c d Bravo, Tony (4 March 2026). "Marie Wilson's first San Francisco solo show in 40 years reclaims a surrealist pioneer". Vol. San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 5 March 2026.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i "Now representing the estate of Marie Wilson". Gallery Wendi Norris. Retrieved 5 March 2026.
- ^ "Opening Reception for Marie Wilson". Downtown San Francisco. Retrieved 5 March 2026.
- ^ "Gallery Wendy Norris". San Francisco Art Week. Retrieved 5 March 2026.
- ^ Caples, Garrett. "Marie Wilson, A Poet of Colors and Forms, Gallery Wendi Norris". Roborant Review. Retrieved 5 March 2026.
- ^ "Marie Wilson American, 1922–2017". Museum of Modern Art. Retrieved 5 March 2026.
- ^ "Marie Wilson: A Poet of Forms and Colors". Wendy Norris Gallery. Retrieved 5 March 2026.
- ^ Verentinou, Victoria (2018). in Modernist Art, Literature, and Cinema (DOI:10.1007/978-3-319-76499-3_8. Springer. pp. 163–191. Retrieved 5 March 2026.
- ^ "Marie Wilson - Βαλαωρίτη, 1922 - 2017 (in Greek)". Athens Voice. Retrieved 5 March 2026.
- ^ "Marie Wilson". André Breton. Retrieved 5 March 2026.