Clara McDonald Williamson

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Born
Clara McDonald

(1875-11-20)November 20, 1875
DiedFebruary 17, 1976(1976-02-17) (aged 100)
StyleNaïve art
SpouseJohn Williamson
Clara McDonald Williamson
Born
Clara McDonald

(1875-11-20)November 20, 1875
DiedFebruary 17, 1976(1976-02-17) (aged 100)
StyleNaïve art
SpouseJohn Williamson
Children1 child; 2 stepchildren

Clara McDonald Williamson (November 20, 1875 – February 17, 1976) was a 20th century American painter who worked in the tradition of naïve art. Her subjects were genre scenes of life in the American West, especially her home state of Texas. Like Grandma Moses, she started painting late in life and she achieved a national reputation despite the fact that her career lasted only two decades.

McDonald was born November 20, 1875, in Iredell, Texas, the second of six children of Mary Lasswell McDonald and Thomas McDonald.[1][2][3] She had only intermittent formal education and little art training.[3] At the age of 20, she went to work in a county clerk's office but lost this job seven years later. She went back to Iredell, where she married John Williamson, a widower with two children.[3] They had one son together. In 1920, they moved to Dallas, where they ran a boarding house and a store. John Williamson died in 1943, at which point his widow, then well into her sixties, took up painting.[1] She has long been interested in it, but her husband believed it was pointless.[3]

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Further reading

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