Early life Wilson was born in 1899 in
Mayfield, Kentucky. Born to Frank and Minnie Wilson. His father was a barber and amateur painter. Wilson attended the Mayfield Colored Grade School. He later attended the
Kentucky Normal and Industrial Institute in
Frankfort for two years, but was only allowed to take courses in agriculture and education. Interested in studying art, Wilson left school at 19 and moved to Chicago where he studied at the
School of the Art Institute of Chicago. He completed his art studies in 1923 and lived in Chicago for the next five years, seeking work as a commercial artist. While in Chicago, he became well acquainted with other Harlem Renaissance artists like sculptor
Richmond Barthé and poet
Gwendolyn Brooks.
Harlem Renaissance and after Wilson moved to
Harlem, New York from Chicago after hearing
Alain Locke speak at a Chicago art exhibition titled "The Negro in Art Week" in 1927. Wilson moved the following year where he joined the
Harlem Artists Guild and worked at a brokerage house. When Ellis first arrived in New York, black artists could not exhibit their work in mainstream galleries. He became an active member of the
Harlem Renaissance, a collaborative effort to promote and exhibit the work of black artists. Ellis participated in many of the exhibitions associated with the movement. Wilson is most noted for his paintings of Haitian people and culture. According to artist, Samella Lewis, "Wilson always produced fully accomplished and sophisticated design patterns...Making bold use of color, his paintings reflect a coherent and personal style that combines aspects of Expressionism with contemporary Realism. His vigorous distortion of form, one of the aspects of Expressionism, is evident in such compositions as Bird Vendor. and was buried in a
pauper's grave. The exact site of his grave is unknown.
In pop culture Ellis Wilson's painting "
Funeral Procession" was featured in the American television
NBC sitcom The Cosby Show, in Season 2, "The Auction". In this episode, Clair Huxtable, played by
Phylicia Rashad, bids on the painting by her great-uncle (Ellis Wilson) and she wins the auction. The painting then remains in the Huxtable living-room throughout the series. ==See also==