
Barnes World-Renowned Work Is Stroke of Genius
Former football standout is leaving a lasting impression
with his interpretation of sport in his paintings.
By STEVE SPRINGER
TIMES STAFF WRITER
Ernie Barnes had the body of a football player. But he always had the
soul of an artist.
So although he was drawing interest from more than two dozen college
recruiters in the mid-1950s as a hulking offensive lineman and track star
for Hillside High in Durham, N.C., what interested Barnes most was painting.
And although he was popular enough to be elected captain of his football
team and good enough to win the state shotput championship, Barnes remained
frustrated because, as a black man in the South, he wasnt allowed
to set foot in a museum or art gallery.
People would say to him: Why would you want to come in here if
youre black?
When he asked why one of his paintings had been rejected by the North
Carolina Museum of Art, Barnes was told: Your people dont
express themselves that way.
Barnes has gone on to express himself well enough to become a world-renowned
artist. His distinctive touch on canvas has earned him countless commissions
and honors.
His work, The Beauty of the Ghetto, was on national tour
for almost two decades. His A Dream Unfolds, commissioned
by the NBA to commemorate its 50th anniversary, hangs in the Basketball
Hall of Fame. Barnes was commissioned official artist of the 1984 Olympics
in Los Angeles. He did a mural for actor Sylvester Stallone titled The
Metamorphosis of Rocky. Barnes did a mural for Seton Hall that earned
him six figures. Those collecting Barnes work range from Bill Cosby
to Norman Lear to Ethel Kennedy.
Barnes latest masterpiece, a painting of boxer Oscar De La Hoya
commissioned by Laker owner Jerry Buss, was unveiled Wednesday night at
De La Hoyas annual charity dinner. "Since I was a child,
said Barnes, who lives in Studio City, the only vision Ive
had of myself was as an artist. Even though I was always a big guy. I
didnt see myself as a football player.
Others, however, didnt see things quite like Banres.
In the community I grew up in, Barnes said, people
didnt understand a kid who liked to draw. My own father once said
to me, Who is going to feed you if you become a painter? I
didnt have a lot of role models in my community.
He had plenty of role models in football and he emulated them. Good enough
at North Carolina College to be named to the All-Time Black College Football
Team, Barnes was drafted in the 10th round by the then-Baltimore Colts
in 1959.
But he was always thinking beyond football.
After signing with the Colts for $6,500, plus a $500 signing bonus, Barnes
was invited to watch the teams championship game against the New
York Giants.
Barnes sat behind the Colts bench. When he got home, his hands
sketched what his eyes had seen. The result was The Bench,
a unique view of pro football from the perspective of those on the sidelines.
Cut by the Colts at the end of his first training camp, Barnes wound
up in the new American Football League, playing five seasons with the
New York Titans, the Los Angeles-San Diego Chargers and the Denver Broncos.
By 1965, his ankle cracked, his feelings for the game soured by what
he calls politics, Barnes was ready to move on.
But where? He wanted to devote himself full-time to being an artist.
But I had a fear, big time, that I couldnt make a living
at it, said Barnes.
Fortunately, he found an influential sponsor who believed in him: New
York Jets owner Sonny Werblin. Werblin gave Barnes a $1,000 advance and
told him to bring his work to a New York gallery.
Nervous and unprepared for such a potentially defining moment, Barnes
attempted to bring his canvases across town on a crowded subway car. At
one point he was forced to hand several paintings off to helpful commuters
to prevent his lifes work from being crushed.
But Barnes knew it had all been worthwhile when Werblin, after enlisting
several critics to assess Barnes work, told him, No more football
for you, young man.
Asked by Werblin what he had made in football the previous season, Barnes
told him $13,500. Werblin offered Barnes $14,500 to spend the next six
months turning out as many paintings as he could.
Barnes took it from there, expanding his subject matter far beyond football,
but leaving a lasting impact from his sport.
The explosive energy and hulking power of the football player images
made an indelible impression upon me, said John Stuart Evans, director
of New Yorks Grand Central Art Galleries. Over the years,
I found these images etched as sharply in my memory as if I had viewed
them only yesterday. Buss, who has commissioned several Barnes
works, is amazed at what the artist produced when hired to try his hand
at hockey on canvas.
He had never seen hockey in person. Buss said. But
after going to his first game, he captured the feel of the sport.
return to press room
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