Wilson was born in
Baltimore, Maryland, into an underprivileged family. Her father died when she was young. She was reared by her
Irish Catholic mother, who sewed piecework at home. Wilson left school after the ninth grade to become a stenographer/secretary to help support her family. When she turned 20, she married a young lawyer, William S. Wilson Jr., and gave birth to her first child. She continued to work until the birth of her second child, after which she devoted her energies primarily to mothering and homemaking. In 1942, the couple had prospered enough to move to
Towson, Maryland, where she began to take correspondence courses in art and art history from several schools, including the
University of Chicago. In 1948, after the marriage of their daughter, the couple moved to a
gentleman's farm north of Towson, where she pursued painting and gave private art lessons to neighbors. She exhibited her paintings, scenes of everyday life painted in a flat, purposefully
primitive manner in local galleries and restaurants. In 1952 and 1958, she won awards for work submitted to juried exhibitions at the
Baltimore Museum of Art. When her marriage dissolved, she moved to New York City in the spring of 1966, aged 61, taking up residence first in the
Chelsea Hotel and then in a studio next door, where she threw legendary soirées and became known as the "Grandma Moses of the Underground". By the time she arrived, Wilson was already working with photomontage techniques. Encouraged by Johnson, who had sent her magazines through the mail, she scissored patterns into images of pin-up girls and muscle men until they resembled doilies or snowflakes, as Wilson called them. She decorated her hotel room and later her studio on West 23rd Street with these and other manipulated,
found object images. Around this time, she also began her series of "Ridiculous Portraits", for which she would ride the subway to
Times Square, where she made exaggerated faces in photo booths. She then would cut and paste her photo-booth face onto postcards, along with Old Master reproductions, fashion shoots, and softcore magazine pornography. Long before artists such as
Cindy Sherman and
Yasumasa Morimura embarked on similar critical projects, Wilson's "Ridiculous Portraits" sent up the ubiquitous sexism and ageism that exists in popular and fine-art images of women. At the age of 70, she converted a nude photograph of herself into a stamp that she pasted on envelopes. Her collages and humorous self-portraits were made as gifts and mail-art items for her friends and were not widely known until after her death. She was also an innovator of
junk art assemblages that incorporated real objects, such as high-heel shoes, bed sheets, sauce pans, toasters, liquor bottles, ice trays, and wrapped baby dolls. Her sculptures were inspired by
Surrealist and
Dada practices and are similar in spirit to
Yayoi Kusama's contemporary accumulations. Since her death, May Wilson's work has been featured in numerous exhibitions and retrospectives at the
Baltimore Museum of Art, Maryland;
Gracie Mansion Gallery, New York; the Morris Museum, Morristown, N.J.; the Pavel Zoubok Gallery, New York City; and The
University of the Arts, Philadelphia. ==Selected exhibitions==