In her early career she worked as a graphic designer, art director, and creative director.[8][1] Wilson worked for Essence and YSB magazines.[1] In 1984, Wilson was named the first female art director at Essence magazine.[9] In 1991, she established Studio W., a graphic design studio, building off her professional experiences from work in the magazine industry.[1]
In August 2016, she co-founded with Norman Teague the blkHaUS Studios, a design studio based in Chicago.[7][10][11] Their work was social practice–focused, in order to make public spaces in Chicago more inviting.[11] The blkHaUS Studios' Back Alley Jazz project worked to revive the jazz culture and traditions found in Chicago in the 1960s and 1970s; they brought together local musicians, architects and artists to build events and performance spaces.[11][12]
Visual art career
In 1995, Renee Cox, Fo Wilson, and Tony Cokes created the Negro Art Collective (NAC) to fight cultural misrepresentations about Black Americans.[13]
In 2008, Wilson constructed a fictitious, 19th-century style scientific exhibition commemorating Sartje Baartman (also known as "The Hottentot Venus") during a residency at the School of Art + Design at SUNY/Purchase.[14]
Her 2016 installation Eliza's Peculiar Cabinet of Curiosities, was a constructed, full-scale, 19th century, fictional, slave cabin with a cabinet of curiosities full of a 100 items of what an African American woman of this time period may have owned or dreamed of owning.[8][15]Eliza's Peculiar Cabinet of Curiosities was an ongoing, Afrofuturist project and was used as a location for related events and performances; on display in 2016 to 2017 at the Lynden Sculpture Garden in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.[15][16]
McLaughlin, Beth; Wilson, Fo (2010). The New Materiality: Digital Dialogues at the Boundaries of Contemporary Craft (exhibition). Stephanie Cole (artist). Fuller Craft Museum. ISBN9780934358217.
Wilson, Fo (2013). The Baartman Diaries (Chicago, Illinois: Studio W Editions).
Dark Matter: Celestial Objects as Messengers of Love in These Troubled Times (exhibition). Folayemi Wilson (artist). Candor Arts. 2021.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
^Art Direction, Volume 36. National Association of Art Directors, National Society of Art Directors. Advertising Trade Publications. April 1984. p. 8.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)