CLONNEY, James Goodwyn
American painter. Although British by birth, he is considered to be one of the great American painters since he went to the United States at a very early age and spent the rest of his life there. He was one of the first generation of American genre painters.
Clonney’s earliest datable work includes two lithographs of urban views and images of birds and animals published in New York between 1830 and 1835. He studied at the National Academy of Design, New York, and exhibited there periodically between 1834 and 1852, specializing in landscape themes, portraits and genre pictures.
The first genre painting he exhibited at the National Academy was Militia Training (1841; Philadelphia, Academy of Fine Arts), although another example, In the Woodshed (1838; Boston, Museum of Fine Arts), predates it. He also exhibited at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts (1845 and 1847) and at the Apollo Association and American Art-Union (1841-50).