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THE FULL LINE OF Ernie Barnes's
ART WORK COLLECTION


1
Ernie Barnes  Growth Through Limits - unsigned
2
Ernie Barnes  The Olympic Experience-unsigned
3
Ernie Barnes  Pause Cafe'/Cofee Break-unsigned
4
Ernie Barnes  Pause Cafe'/Cofee Break-signed
5
Ernie Barnes  Skins & Shirts-unsigned
6
Ernie Barnes  Skins & Shirts-signed
7
Ernie Barnes  The Victor's Crown-unsigned
8
Ernie Barnes  Window Wishing-unsigned
9
Ernie Barnes  Window Wishing-signed
10
Ernie Barnes  Anniversary-unsigned
11
Ernie Barnes  Come Sunday-signed
12
Ernie Barnes  Double Dutch-unsigned
13
Ernie Barnes  The Fullback-signed
14
Ernie Barnes  The Graduate-unsigned
15
Ernie Barnes  Homecoming-unsigned
16
Ernie Barnes  Head over Heels-unsigned
17
Ernie Barnes  High Aspirations-unsigned
18
Ernie Barnes  Jake-unsigned
19
Ernie Barnes  Late Night DJ-unsigned
20
Ernie Barnes  The Maestro-unsigned
21
Ernie Barnes  Ninety Nine, A Hunered-unsigned
22
Ernie Barnes  Ring Around The Rosie-unsigned
23
Ernie Barnes  Room Ful'A Sistahs-unsigned
24
Ernie Barnes  Room Ful'A Sistahs-signed
25
Ernie Barnes  Singin Sistahs-unsigned
26
Ernie Barnes  Solid Rock Congregation-unsigned
27
Ernie Barnes  Springboard-unsigned
28
Ernie Barnes  Sugar Shack-unsigned
29
Ernie Barnes  Achievement-unsigned
30
Ernie Barnes  Achievement-signed
31
Ernie Barnes  Determination-unsigned
32
Ernie Barnes  Determination-signed
33
Ernie Barnes  Effort-unsigned
34
Ernie Barnes  Effort-signed
35
Ernie Barnes  Excellence-unsigned
36
Ernie Barnes  Excellence-signed
37
Ernie Barnes  Perseverance-unsigned
38
Ernie Barnes  Teamwork-unsigned
39
Ernie Barnes  Teamwork-signed
40
Ernie Barnes  Boxing Gym
41
Ernie Barnes  The Palace Barber Shop
42
Ernie Barnes  Soft Power Signed and Numbered Limited Edition
43
Ernie Barnes  Tete-A-Tete Signed and Numbered Limited Edition
44
Ernie Barnes  Girlfriends Signed and Numbered Limited Edition
45
Ernie Barnes  Victory In Overtime
46
Ernie Barnes  ERNIE BARNES DISCO Signed and Numbered Limited Edition IS A FOUR COLOR LITHO ON HEAVY QUALITY PAPER. HAND SIGNED AND NUMBERED. ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED IN 1979 AND HAS BEEN LONG OUT OF PRINT.
47
Ernie Barnes  Olympic Boxing Limited Edition
48
Ernie Barnes  Neighborhood Games - Pencil Signed
49
Ernie Barnes  Olympic Gymnast - Pencil Signed.
50
Ernie Barnes  In The Beginning Signed and Numbered Limited Edition
51
Ernie Barnes  Mainstreet Pool Hall Artist Proof Signed and Numbered Limited Edition
52
Ernie Barnes  Practice Wall
53
Ernie Barnes  The Finish Olympic Track Pencil Signed.
54
Ernie Barnes  The Drum Major
55
Ernie Barnes  From Pads to Palette - an autobiography by Ernie Barnes, 1995. Hardcover, 96 pages - 22 full-page color photos of original art and 52 photos of rare sketchbook studies.
56
Ernie Barnes  The Bomb from The Portfolio of Football Art, comes mounted and matted. There is as much beauty in the game of football as there is sweat and blood. Here is a classic example. The ball is in the air – spinning dust and sweat as it falls in an easy curve towards the receiver…with the quickness of a cat and the form of a ballet dancer, the receiver glides gracefully into the air on his way to pull in the brown leather. The glory is great if he catches it, but if he drops it, the disgrace is absolute.
57
Ernie Barnes  The Handoff from The Portfolio of Football Art. I have always thought of the pro quarterback as being much like a matador and the big men surrounding him in violent conflict as powerful bulls. Armed with only his courage and a knowledge of all the complexities of a modern pro defense, the quarterback in this drawing hands off to a charging back as he drives hard towards the wall of bone and muscle.
58
Ernie Barnes  Two Linemen from The Portfolio of Football Art, comes mounted and matted. Behind the helmeted bars of pro football’s legendary linemen are men who thrive on physical contact. These men, all of whom have surpassed their growth potential, show a cool disregard for the hand-to-hand battle in the line. They learned early – from the time they began to play – that one need not cringe from contact and that one need fear no one, regardless of size or mouth.
59
Ernie Barnes  The Pulling Guards from The Portfolio of Football Art. Here the big strong guards pull out to sweep a path for the violent evasive action of the ball carrier. I’ve been asked many times: “What do guards think about when they pull out of the line to hit somebody?” My answer: “Running through him.” Maybe a better reply can be seen on the faces of the guards here.
60
Ernie Barnes  The Backstretch Signed and Numbered Limited Edition (created in 1979)
61
Ernie Barnes  The Comedian Signed and Numbered Limited Edition
62
Ernie Barnes  Destination Unknown Signed and Numbered Limited Edition printed on Rag Paper. Printed in 1979.
63
Ernie Barnes  Come Sunday
64
Ernie Barnes  PAUL WESTPHALL IN ACTION
65
Ernie Barnes  The Advocate
66
Ernie Barnes  To Know Defeat Artist Signed To Know Defeat from The Portfolio of Football Art, comes mounted and matted. There is little one can say about what it feels like to lose. Defeat is a personal thing, and in it each man must suffer in his own way.
67
Ernie Barnes  From Pads to Palette - an autobiography by Ernie Barnes, 1995. Hardcover, 96 pages - 22 full-page color photos of original art and 52 photos of rare sketchbook studies. Hand Signed by Ernie Barnes
68
Ernie Barnes  Ninety Nine, A Hunered Lithograph
69
Ernie Barnes  The Graduate Lithograph
70
Ernie Barnes  Jake Lithograph
71
Ernie Barnes  Dreams Lithograph
72
Ernie Barnes  The Funky Butt Lithograph
73
Ernie Barnes  The Runner Lithograph
74
Ernie Barnes  Street Song Lithograph
75
Ernie Barnes  Rock Of Ages Lithograph
76
Ernie Barnes  Come Sunday Lithograph
77
Ernie Barnes  The Bomb from The Portfolio of Football Art

There is as much beauty in the game of football as there is sweat and blood. Here is a classic example. The ball is in the air – spinning dust and sweat as it falls in an easy curve towards the receiver…with the quickness of a cat and the form of a ballet dancer, the receiver glides gracefully into the air on his way to pull in the brown leather. The glory is great if he catches it, but if he drops it, the disgrace is absolute.
78
Ernie Barnes  Two Linemen from The Portfolio of Football Art.

Behind the helmeted bars of pro football’s legendary linemen are men who thrive on physical contact. These men, all of whom have surpassed their growth potential, show a cool disregard for the hand-to-hand battle in the line. They learned early – from the time they began to play – that one need not cringe from contact and that one need fear no one, regardless of size or mouth.
79
Ernie Barnes  The Pulling Guards from The Portfolio of Football Art.

Here the big strong guards pull out to sweep a path for the violent evasive action of the ball carrier. I’ve been asked many times: “What do guards think about when they pull out of the line to hit somebody?” My answer: “Running through him.” Maybe a better reply can be seen on the faces of the guards here.
80
Ernie Barnes  The Handoff from The Portfolio of Football Art.

I have always thought of the pro quarterback as being much like a matador and the big men surrounding him in violent conflict as powerful bulls. Armed with only his courage and a knowledge of all the complexities of a modern pro defense, the quarterback in this drawing hands off to a charging back as he drives hard towards the wall of bone and muscle.
81
Ernie Barnes  To Know Defeat A Portfolio Of Football Art.

To Know Defeat from The Portfolio of Football Art, comes mounted and matted. There is little one can say about what it feels like to lose. Defeat is a personal thing, and in it each man must suffer in his own way.
82
Ernie Barnes  Ernie Barnes 1984 Limited Edition Olympic Series Set Hand Signed in Pencil.

Renown Artist Ernest "Ernie" Eugene Barnes, Jr sadly passed away on April 27th, 2009.

Ernie_Barnes
Ernie Barnes was born July 15, 1938. Endowed with an innate sensitivity, he knew early in life that he wanted to become an artist. Initial impressions were fashioned in the rich soil of Durham, North Carolina, while his sensibilities were cultivated in a loving home by his parents, Ernest Sr. and Fannie (Geer) Barnes. As a child, he often accompanied his mother to the home of the prominent attorney, Frank Fuller, Jr., where she worked as a domestic. Through his expansive library, Fuller introduced Barnes to the works of the great master artists such as Rembrandt, Raphael and Michelangelo. Amidst the harshness of life in the segregated south in the1940's, artistic ambitions would prove to be an impossibility. His father echoed the sentiments of many in ridiculing and forbidding young Ernest's desire to be an artist. His peers also asserted their disdain by beating him on a daily basis. The isolation and despair of this shy, fat, un-athletic boy plagued him until he reached junior high school. Through the constant encouragement of one of his teachers, he painstakingly reinvented himself, graduating from high school with 26 football scholarships and the respect of the entire community. Shielded by the virility of football, Barnes majored in art. He would have preferred to attend the local Duke University or University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, but blacks were not yet allowed on those campuses. He received his academic training at North Carolina College (now North Carolina Central University) in Durham, and is an heir to the legacy of the Harlem Renaissance, which was handed down by his teachers W. B. Fletcher and Ed Wilson. Emphasizing skill and the fundamentals, their traditional courses gave Barnes the necessary foundation to develop his own style. His desire to become an artist, however, was deeply challenged on a 1956 field trip to the newly-desegregated North Carolina Museum of Art. When he was unable to find paintings of or by blacks anywhere in the museum, he asked where they were exhibited. In response, the Caucasian docent summed up the prevailing attitude of the time when she emphatically declared, "Your people don't express themselves this way." In that instance, Barnes realized the prejudices and hurdles he would have to overcome in his quest to be an artist, and the gravity of the task he had set out for himself. Having acquired the necessary tutelage, Barnes' principal ambition was to become the artist he was told he could never be. His figurative mode of expression, however, was completely contrary to the abstract paintings which had come into vogue. Without a role model or resource for encouragement in art, Barnes instead entered the arena of professional football. In 1960, he was the 10th draft choice of the then-World Champion Baltimore Colts. He spent five successful seasons as an offensive guard for the San Diego Chargers (1960-62), and later for the Denver Broncos (1963-64). Many of his early works reflected his time on the playing field. He credits the energy of the game for inspiring his mannerist style of painting and fluidity of technique. In 1965, Barnes retired from football to devote his life to art. His break into the art world came when former hotel chairman and Charger team owner Barron Hilton facilitated a meeting with the late New York Jets owner, David Werblin. Following a critical art evaluation in which Barnes was deemed "the most expressive painter of the American scene since George Bellows," Werblin paid Barnes his football salary to quit football and hone his skills as an artist. Recognizing the racial barriers inherent in America's infrastructure, Werblin sponsored Barnes' first solo exhibition, placing him with Manhattan's prestigious Grand Central Art Galleries. Following that sold-out show, Barnes moved to Los Angeles and began exhibiting his art consistently. Away from his easel, he pursued opportunities in the entertainment industry and created the CBS Super Comedy Bowl, which aired from 1969-1970. As an actor, he had featured roles in three films: Number One with Charlton Heston; Doctors' Wives, and Don't Look Back, the story of Satchel Paige. He also appeared on the ABC television series, Doctors' Hospital for one season. Barnes found great success in Hollywood, and the entertainment community simultaneously embraced him as an artist by avidly collecting his work. The social and political climate of the late 1960's and early 1970's ignited Barnes' imagination. As civil rights and the black pride movement exploded, he was providing positive and tangible examples. His vision was presented in 1971 through his solo exhibition, The Beauty of the Ghetto. Hosted by the late Mayor Tom Bradley, it premiered in Los Angeles at the Heritage Gallery, with several successive showings, including a 1974 presentation hosted by Ethel Kennedy in Washington, D.C. The exhibition filled a void, as it was the first visible testimony to illuminate the endearing and virtuous aspects of black life in America. The response was overwhelming. One of the paintings from the exhibition, titled Sugar Shack became the most visible painting by an American artist since Edward Hopper's Nighthawks. The image was used by producer Norman Lear for the opening credits of his television show Good Times, and by Marvin Gaye as the cover to his 1976 album. The unifying effects of the exhibition garnered Barnes many accolades, and in 1974 Representative John Conyers wrote Barnes into the Congressional Record. This memorable exhibition intentionally moved away from themes of social and political protest. By giving vision to the common properties in the daily lives of African Americans, Barnes defined the very essence of a culture. His work and unique style influenced countless artists to emulate him, forging the path for what has become known as "black art" in America. Due to the impact of the exhibition, many have tried to identify Barnes solely as an interpreter of African American life, but to do so would only dilute his true impact on mainstream American painting. He is a synthesizer of all cultures who integrates the fundamental tenants of Western civilization. As an artist, his oeuvre seeks to inspire, educate and reacquaint us with ourselves and those around us. Based on his diverse life experiences, he suggests a world of aesthetics and harmony, portraying the human figure with vivid palpability. His command of movement, particularly in his sports paintings, earned him the appointment as Official Artist of the XXIII Olympiad at Los Angeles in 1984. Barnes has five children from two previous marriages. He and his wife, Bernie, support arts in education through their active involvement with the Los Angeles Unified School District wide Arts Program. Acting as a role model, he seeks to encourage and support the mental, emotional and creative efforts of all children. His 1992 painting "Growth Through Limits," depicting three culturally diverse youths watching a fragile flower grow through a crack in the cement, is a visual metaphor to inspire children. At the request of city officials, Barnes licensed the painting for use as a billboard in urban Los Angeles. After creating an essay contest for students at the junior high school level, Barnes awarded the winner a cash prize for interpreting the painting's symbolic message. He endeavors to further advance the vital role the arts can play in education through speaking engagements and other associations. In 1995, Barnes completed his autobiography From Pads to Palette, which recounts his transformation from a football player to artist.

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