About Evan Wilson
Evan Wilson was born in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, in 1953. He
showed interest in art at an early age when University of
Alabama art professor and family friend Richard Brough
provided him with painting materials and inspiration. In
1971, Wilson enrolled in the prestigious North Carolina
School of the Arts to complete high school. There he
experimented with various styles of art. After high school,
Wilson attended the Maryland Institute College of Art in
Baltimore where he met his lifelong mentor, Joseph
Sheppard, an internationally known realist painter. Under
Sheppard’s training, Wilson began his evolution as a
realist painter.
After college, Wilson studied at the Schuler School of Fine
Arts in Baltimore. In 1978, he was awarded the Greenshields
Foundation grant to study painting in Florence, Italy. Over
the following twenty-five years, Wilson has honed his
technique, which uses broad brushstrokes to create
paintings that are immediate and of the moment. A master of
painting light and its effects on objects, he often
incorporates swatches of sunlight in his interiors. He
takes ordinary objects and scenes in life – such as hanging
clothes on a line – and makes them elegant. As he stated in
the Huntsville Museum of Art catalog to his show, “the fun
comes when playing with traditional concepts to create
something entirely new.” For example, Wilson places casual
sunflowers in silver and porcelain vases for a fresh
interpretation.
Wilson extended the realism tradition into a new realm when
he painted a series of canvases depicting baptisms in the
Gees Bend area of Alabama. The works have a “timeless,
spiritual quality” that viewers have responded to with
emotion. Down to the Water, Alabama Baptism is Wilson’s
quintessential depiction of a rural baptism in a creek.
After researching for eight years, Wilson decided to
portray a processionary rhythm with sunlight flowing down
the embankment. In 2001, Down to the Water was featured in
a solo exhibition at the Huntsville Museum of Art (catalog
enclosed) and later was purchased for the museum’s
permanent collection.
Wilson’s paintings are included in many other public and
private collections, including the Greenville County Museum
of Art in South Carolina and the Royal Academy of Music in
London, England. Nearly thirty of Wilson’s paintings are
included in the collection of the Warner Westervelt Museum
of Art, considered to be one of the finest collections of
American art in the world.
Wilson has received many awards. Most recently, he was
honored with the William Bouguereau Award for Emotion,
Theme and the Figure in the 2006 Art Renewal Center’s
Annual International Salon. In 1999, Wilson received the
Alabama Arts Award presented by the University of Alabama’s
Society for the Fine Arts in recognition of his artistic
talent and ability to capture his Alabama heritage on
canvas.
Wilson remains true to his mission to bring realist
painting back into the forefront of American art. Most
recently, he helped organize an exhibition entitled
“Legacy: A Tradition Lives On,” which is on a three-year
tour of museums nationwide. There, he is grouped with
eleven other artists who also studied under Joseph
Sheppard. Please visit traditionliveson.com for more
information on this important exhibit.
Wilson’s strong traditional training to “paint what he
sees” has allowed him to paint a wide array of subjects,
from white peonies in silver pitchers to rural baptisms in
creeks to the official portrait of Alabama First Lady Lori
Siegelman. Always searching for new subjects and new ways
to depict them, Wilson divides his time among interiors,
florals, figures, landscapes, and portraits.
Currently, Wilson lives in Hoosick, New York, a painterly
location in upstate. His early-nineteenth-century home is
often the subject matter of his paintings. He also makes
regular visits to Alabama for inspiration. The diverse
subjects he has painted in his home state include the
Sipsey Swamp, the Cahaba Lilies, and big-leaf magnolias
prevalent in Alabama.
Wilson currently exhibits in Nantucket, Charleston, and New
Orleans.