William Wilson
William (Will) Wilson is a Diné photographer who spent his formative years living on the Navajo Nation. Born in San Francisco in 1969, Wilson studied photography at the University of New Mexico.
Photo by Will Wilson
William Wilson
Santa Fe
2017 Recipient, Artist, Photographer
William (Will) Wilson is a Diné photographer who spent his formative years living on the Navajo Nation. Born in San Francisco in 1969, Wilson studied photography at the University of New Mexico (Dissertation Tracked MFA in Photography, 2002) and Oberlin College (BA, Studio Art and Art History, 1993).
Wilson is renowned for combining digital technology, historic photographic processes, performance and installation to address the themes that most concern him, including the impacts of cultural and environmental change on indigenous peoples, and the possibility of cultural survival and renewal. In 2007, Wilson won the Native American Fine Art Fellowship from the Eiteljorg Museum, and in 2010 was awarded a prestigious grant from the Joan Mitchell Foundation.
Wilson has held visiting professorships at the Institute of American Indian Arts (1999-2000), Oberlin College (2000-01), and the University of Arizona (2006-08). From 2009 to 2011, Wilson managed the National Vision Project, a Ford Foundation funded initiative at the Museum of Contemporary Native Arts in Santa Fe, and helped to coordinate the New Mexico Arts Temporary Installations Made for the Environment (TIME) program on the Navajo Nation.
Wilson is part of the Science and Arts Research Collaborative (SARC) which brings together artists interested in using science and technology in their practice with collaborators from Los Alamos National Laboratory and Sandia Labs as part of the International Symposium on Electronic Arts, 2012 (ISEA).
Recently, Wilson completed an exhibition and artist residency at the Denver Art Museum and is currently the King Fellow artist in residence at the School of Advanced Research in Santa Fe, NM. He also has headed the photography department at Santa Fe Community College.