Emma Wilcox was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts at the School of Visual Arts in 2002. Wilcox is a writer and artist, maintaining an artistic and curatorial interest in history, including the history of artist communities. She is also Co-Founder and Gallery Director at Gallery Aferro.
As a photographer, Wilcox is concerned with environmental justice, land usage, eminent domain, and individual memory in the creation of local history. Her solo exhibitions include Where it Falls (2012), The Print Center, Philadelphia, and William Patterson University Galleries, Wayne; Emma Wilcox (2010) at Gitterman Gallery, New York; Salvage Rights (2009), Real Art Ways, Hartford; and Forensic Landscapes (2007), Jersey City Museum. She is the recipient of grants from organizations including the Harpo Foundation (2011), the Northern Manhattan Arts Alliance Creative (2011), and the New Jersey State Arts Council (2007). Wilcox has been Artist in residence at the Camera Club Of New York (2008) and the Newark Museum (2009), and a participant in Night School at the New Museum, Emerge 7 at Aljira, Newark (2007) and AIM at the Bronx Museum (2009). Her work is included in the collection of the Philadelphia Museum of Art.
Where It Falls, a traveling exhibition and publication of her artwork was inspired by a text fragment from the original 1713 survey of Newark, encountered when she was an artist in residence at the Newark Museum. Her work has been featured in Women in Photography, Art in America, American Suburb X, Lolife, Black and White, and The New Yorker‘s photoblog, Photo Booth. Wilcox has written for Bomb, Zing, and Influence magazines. She regularly lectures on art and cultural engagement topics for organizations ranging from the College Art Association, the New Jersey Historical Society, Rider University, New Jersey Arts Pride, and many others. She lives and works in Newark.