Of her early work, Stuart Preston wrote: "[Jane Wilson] is a hedonist in paint, employing a plethora of strokes and bright colors that sometimes fall into still-lifes and figures but usually do not." Speaking of Wilson's work from the early 1950s,
Dore Ashton wrote: "[She] is a young painter enchanted by the majesty of light. Her landscapes and even her figure studies are articulated in terms of the moods of the sun. Basically a frank expressionist, Miss Wilson brushes her landscapes energetically in strong color." In 1957 she appeared in
Life magazine as one of five leading young women painters, along with
Joan Mitchell and
Helen Frankenthaler. Also in the late 1950s,
Time,
Glamour, and
Coronet magazines featured reviews and articles that increased her visibility and reputation as a painter. In 1963,
The New York Times critic
John Canaday wrote: "Occasionally an artist comes along who puts a strain on the critic’s adjectival resources because half the adjectives that are appropriate as descriptions sound derogatory when they are meant to be laudatory. Jane Wilson, with a new show at the
Tibor de Nagy Gallery, is such a painter. Sweetness is one of the undeniable qualities of her art, but to call a painting sweet is to damn it, even though
Gainsborough and
Berthe Morisot, both of whom Miss Wilson calls to mind, are among painters vulnerable to the same word. Like Gainsborough and Morisot, Miss Wilson knows how to handle a brush. She is so expert, so deft, so assured, that one fears from one exhibition to the next that her hand will take over and we will get that automatic, habitual flair with all the surface manifestations of vivacious sparkle and dulcet flow that are meaningless when the controlling sensitivity has grown careless or has been exhausted. Part of the delight (“delightful” is another partially suspect adjective) of Miss Wilson's painting is that in each picture she seems to have touched just that balance between delicacy and assurance..." In 1984 critic Michael Brenson wrote in
The New York Times: "The human world seems to be holding its breath through different stages of a continuing, sometimes heated debate among earth, water and sky. … In these landscapes… the intelligence and will of the artist are so thoroughly interiorized in the pictorial struggle that the paintings are experienced by the visitor well before and long after they are really seen." In 1985, Paul Gardner wrote of Wilson's career: "In her own restrained way, without any pomp or puff, Wilson represents what the art world is about: staying power, whatever the trend of the moment, and a consistently developing body of work that results in a steadily increasing reputation." In 1997,
Lucy Sante wrote of Wilson's relationship with the sky: "Any one of Jane Wilson’s paintings is a marvel; the effect of a roomful is extraordinary. From the dark troubled ones to those whose pale gradients make them impossible to photograph, the array is overwhelmingly various as the work of one painter treating a single subject. And yet in all its abundance it might be seen as comprising one vast work, just as in its single, austere dedication it is expressive of the most unbridled extravagance, and in its primal nature it is endlessly renewable, eternally now. Together, Jane Wilson and the sky have made an encyclopedia of moods and textures and marks and palettes, delineating the immense multiple personality we collectively name weather. The sky, which has no memory of its own, is tremendously fortunate to have her as its portraitist, its analyst, its biographer." In 2016 her biography was included in the exhibition catalogue
Women of Abstract Expressionism organized by the
Denver Art Museum. Wilson exhibited steadily from 1953. She received many honors and widespread recognition for her work, including election to the
American Academy of Arts and Letters, New York. Wilson was the first woman to be elected to the presidency of the National Academy of Design. == Selected public collections ==