Jane Wilson, an Iowa-born artist celebrated for her evocative landscapes, posthumously achieved another milestone in her illustrious career. Her painting American Horizon (2000) hung prominently during President Donald Trump’s 2025 inauguration luncheon in the National Statuary Hall of the U.S. Capitol. The artwork, loaned from the Art Institute of Chicago, is the first piece by a woman artist to feature in the event’s history.
The selection was announced by Democratic Senator Amy Klobuchar, who reflected on its resonance with the day’s political themes. “The enduring horizon is especially meaningful as we mark our enduring democracy,” she remarked, according to a transcript from CBS. Meanwhile, the vast expanse beyond the picture’s frame symbolizes “our next chapter” as a nation, she said.
Born in 1924 on her family’s farm in Seymour, Iowa, Wilson’s journey took her far from America’s Midwest. She relocated to New York City in 1949, where she became a fixture in Abstract Expressionist circles. There, she met well-known names such as Jackson Pollock and Willem de Kooning at the legendary Cedar Tavern. Her early work was purely abstract, but by the 1960s, she developed her signature style: luminous landscapes capturing fleeting moments of natural drama.
American Horizon is typical of this approach, with its expansive representation of sky and land that comes close to abstraction. It’s a scene that, as Klobuchar noted, could evoke any region in the U.S., from the Iowa plains to Florida’s shores.
Wilson’s work, now in the collections of institutions such as the Museum of Modern Art and the Whitney Museum of American Art, earned her nationwide acclaim during her lifetime. Her 1960 portrait of Andy Warhol, commissioned by the artist himself, remains a testament to her influence in the downtown New York art world.
Though she passed away in 2015 at age 90, Wilson’s paintings continue to captivate audiences. In September 2023, her representing gallery, DC Moore, presented a solo show, “Atmospheres,” of Wilson’s characteristic sky-focused landscapes. “What I’m aiming for are moments of strong sensation—moments of total physical experience of the landscape,” Wilson once said, according to the gallery’s website.