Clara McDonald Williamson
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Clara McDonald Williamson (November 20, 1875 – February 17, 1976) was a 20th century American painter who worked in the tradition of
naïve art Naïve art is usually defined as visual art that is created by a person who lacks the formal education and training that a professional artist undergoes (in anatomy, art history, technique, perspective, ways of seeing). When this aesthetic is ...
. Her subjects were genre scenes of life in the American West, especially her home state of
Texas Texas (, ; Spanish language, Spanish: ''Texas'', ''Tejas'') is a state in the South Central United States, South Central region of the United States. At 268,596 square miles (695,662 km2), and with more than 29.1 million residents in 2 ...
. Like
Grandma Moses Anna Mary Robertson Moses (September 7, 1860 – December 13, 1961), or Grandma Moses, was an American folk artist. She began painting in earnest at the age of 78 and is a prominent example of a newly successful art career at an advanced age. H ...
, she started painting late in life and she achieved a national reputation despite the fact that her career lasted only two decades.


Biography

McDonald was born November 20, 1875, in
Iredell, Texas Iredell ( )Not ''-rə-del''. is a city located in Bosque County in central Texas, United States. The population was 339 at the 2010 census. Geography Iredell is located at (31.984589, –97.870727). According to the United States Census Bure ...
, the second of six children of Mary Lasswell McDonald and Thomas McDonald. She had only intermittent formal education and little art training. At the age of 20, she went to work in a
county clerk A clerk is a white-collar worker who conducts general office tasks, or a worker who performs similar sales-related tasks in a retail environment. The responsibilities of clerical workers commonly include record keeping, filing, staffing service ...
's office but lost this job seven years later. She went back to Iredell, where she married John Williamson, a widower with two children. They had one son together. In 1920, they moved to Dallas, where they ran a boarding house and a store. John died in 1943, at which point Williamson, then well into her sixties, took up painting. She has long been interested in it, but her husband believed it was pointless.


Art

Starting in 1943, Williamson took several classes in drawing and painting at
Southern Methodist University , mottoeng = "The truth will make you free" , established = , type = Private research university , accreditation = SACS , academic_affiliations = , religious_affiliation = United Methodist Church , president = R. Gerald Turner , prov ...
and the Dallas Museum School. She quickly began working on what she called "memory paintings" that referred to incidents from her early rural life; these became a dominant theme in her oeuvre. Often the underlying story or event figures in the title. Examples include ''Chicken for Dinner'' (1945), ''The Girls Went Fishing'' (1945–46), ''Standing in the Need of Prayer'' (1947, showing a revival meeting by torchlight), ''Texas Barn Dance'' (1951), ''The Day the Bosque Froze Over'' (1953), and ''The Night Before Christmas'' (1954). She also made paintings whose subjects were more generic to the western United States, such as two paintings about cattle drives—''Git 'Long Little Dogies'' (1945) and ''Old Chisholm Trail'' (1952)—and a painting about the coming of the railroad, ''The Building of the Railroad (1949–50)''. The cattle-drive paintings are unusual as a pair since Williamson hardly ever painted the same subject more than once. With their genre subjects, eccentric perspective, flat paint handling, and simplified and stylized forms, Williamson's paintings are typical of American naïve art. Her palette was restrained, leaning towards desaturated greens, browns, and grays in middle and light tones that lent a luminous subtlety to the finished works. She made a few charcoal sketches and watercolors but worked mostly in oil on canvas. She had an unusual method of painting her canvases from top to bottom, which she explained as a way to keep paint off of herself. Williamson—who became known as "Aunt Clara" within the art world—sold her first work within a short time of beginning to paint; it was bought by Jerry Bywaters, who at the time was the director of the
Dallas Museum of Fine Arts The Dallas Museum of Art (DMA) is an art museum located in the Arts District of downtown Dallas, Texas, along Woodall Rodgers Freeway between St. Paul and Harwood. In the 1970s, the museum moved from its previous location in Fair Park to the A ...
. Through the dealer Donald Vogel, who promoted her work and later wrote a book about her, she began entering her work in art competitions and in 1946 won the Dealey Purchase Award at the Dallas Allied Arts Exhibit. Two years later, she had a solo exhibition at the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, following which she began to establish a national reputation. Her work was included in the 1950 exhibition "American Painting Today" at the
Metropolitan Museum of Art The Metropolitan Museum of Art of New York City, colloquially "the Met", is the largest art museum in the Americas. Its permanent collection contains over two million works, divided among 17 curatorial departments. The main building at 1000 ...
in New York, as well as in several traveling exhibitions organized by the
Smithsonian Institution The Smithsonian Institution ( ), or simply the Smithsonian, is a group of museums and education and research centers, the largest such complex in the world, created by the U.S. government "for the increase and diffusion of knowledge". Founded ...
. In the 1960s, the
Amon Carter Museum Amon may refer to: Mythology * Amun, an Ancient Egyptian deity, also known as Amon and Amon-Ra * Aamon, a Goetic demon People Momonym * Amon of Judah ( 664– 640 BC), king of Judah Given name * Amon G. Carter (1879–1955), American pu ...
organized a traveling retrospective of her work. In 1969, a documentary on Williamson was shown on national television. Williamson's success came despite her lack of interest in a career; she said once that she held back from the art world to some extent out of fear that "they'd tell me what to paint, how to paint it, and when to paint." Williamson moved into a nursing home in 1966, where she completed the last of her more than 100 paintings. She died on February 17, 1976, aged 100. Her work is held in the collections of the
Museum of Modern Art The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) is an art museum located in Midtown Manhattan, New York City, on 53rd Street between Fifth and Sixth Avenues. It plays a major role in developing and collecting modern art, and is often identified as one of ...
(New York), the Dallas Museum of Art, the Amon Carter Museum, and several other art museums and institutions.


References


Further reading

* Vogel, Donald and Margaret. ''Aunt Clara: The Paintings of Clara McDonald Williamson''. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1966. {{DEFAULTSORT:Williamson, Clara Mcdonald 1875 births 1976 deaths American centenarians American women painters 20th-century American painters Painters from Texas Naïve painters 20th-century American women artists People from Dallas Women centenarians