Wilson, Wendell E.
Wendell Eugene Wilson was born in Minnesota in 1946, and began collecting minerals in 1956. A life-long artist, he studied at the Minneapolis Institute of Art while still in high school and began selling his artworks as a young teenager. He won numerous awards in art, including first place in a statewide cartooning competition in 1959. In college he pursued a double-major in Fine Art and Geology at the University of Minnesota, graduating in 1969. He earned his M.S. in Mineralogy (1972) from Arizona State University, while field-collecting extensively in Arizona's many abandoned mines and famous mineral localities. After obtaining his PhD in Mineralogy (1976) from the University of Minnesota, he was hired by the Mineralogical Record as full-time Editor and eventually rose to the positions of Editor-in-Chief, Publisher and corporation CEO.
In addition to collecting minerals, Wilson has built substantial collections of mining artifacts of all kinds, and published four books on antique miners' lamps, containing hundreds of hand-drawn pen-and-ink illustrations of miners' oil-wick “frog” lamps, candleholders, and carbide cap lamps. Some of his collectibles appear as props in his paintings of underground scenes. His first mineral painting appeared on the cover of the November-December 1972 issue of Mineralogical Record. His series of fantasy mineral-collecting scenes now numbers 14, and he has produced numerous specimen portraits in oil on canvas, watercolor, India ink and mixed media, as well as a number of highly detailed mining still life paintings in oil on canvas, oil on copper, and India ink.
Over the years Wilson has continued to produce artworks regularly as time permits. He has published over 1,000 mineral and mining artworks, and over 6,500 mineral photographs. His publications include over 270 journal articles in mineralogy, over 400 shorter works (book reviews, etc.), and nearly 2,000 biographies of mineralogists and other people in the mineral world. He also founded the Antiquarian Reprint Series as a method of preserving and distributing very rare, early illustrated mineral books, featuring mineral art from before the age of photography.
The new mineral species wendwilsonite was named in his honor in 1987; he was elected a Fellow of the Mineralogical Society of America in 1989; he was presented with the Carnegie Mineralogical Award for 2001 (“in recognition of outstanding contributions to the field of mineralogy”); and his mineral collection won the Paul E. Desautels Memorial Trophy (the highest honor in mineral collecting) in 2013. Wilson continues to publish the Mineralogical Record and to write about, paint, research, photograph and collect minerals in Tucson, Arizona (e-mail: minrecord@comcast.net).
References:
Mitchell, R. S. (1988) Who's who in mineral names: Wendell Eugene Wilson, Jr. and Ignacio Domeyko. Rocks & Minerals, 63, 400-402.
Robinson, S. (1987) Mineral art today. Rocks & Minerals, 62, 328-343.
Robinson, S. (1987) Of mines and men: a look at art that depicts mining. Rocks & Minerals, 64, 476-495.
Elbaite from the Himalaya Mine, California
India ink on paper (1977), commissioned by Bill Larson for his ad, based on a specimen in his collection. Published in Mineralogical Record. vol. 8, no. 4, page 285.
Morganite on “Blue-Cap” Elbaite from the Tourmaline Queen Mine, California
India ink on paper (1977), commissioned by Keith Proctor for his ad, based on a specimen in his collection. Published in Mineralogical Record. vol. 8, no. 4, inside back cover.
Blue-Cap Spinner
Humorous take on Dave Wilber’s famous morganite-on-tourmaline from the Tourmaline Queen mine, drawn for Rock Currier’s ad in the November-December 1981 issue of the Mineralogical Record. (See bottom drawing on previous page for the true version.)
Packing Wulfenite at Los Lamentos
India ink on paper (1982), drawn to illustrate a collecting story recounting a visit to Los Lamentos, Mexico in 1949; published in Mineralogical Record in vol. 13, no. 5, page 319.
Rhodochrosite from the Sweet Home Mine, Colorado
India ink on paper (1974), commissioned by David Wilber for his ad, based on a specimen in his collection. Published in Mineralogical Record. vol. 5, no. 6.
Cerussite from Tsumeb, Namibia
India ink on paper (1976), commissioned by Keith Proctor for his ad, based on a specimen in his collection. Published in Mineralogical Record. vol. 7, no. 4, page 98.
Awuamarine from Espirito Santo, Brazil
India ink on paper (1975), commissioned by Jack Lowell for his ad, based on a specimen in his collection; the specimen is now in the collection of Brian and Brett Kosnar. Published in Mineralogical Record. vol. 6, no. 2, page 62.
Rob Lavinsky, Wendell Wilson, and Susan Robinson.








