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In a new group summer show at
Victor Armendariz Gallery in Chicago, you can find the riveting
baseball-related work of Margie Lawrence (https://margielawrence.com). This is
not a show of iconic sports images (although there may be a few), but more of
an examination of how we transition to and from golden ages of public memory,
how shared memories of unquestioned great achievements can trigger the intense emotions developing closeness or
unity and how baseball used to pervade our lives much more in America as a type
of common language, experience and iconography. It is baseball before the ages
of analytics and steroids, when managers used their guts to make decisions and,
perhaps, when we were just not able to learn of any sinful deeds among our
heroes, who were barely paid enough to sin.
Lawrence’s work seems to often be
about the figures whose personalities, intensity, values, work-ethic, charm and
grace often made them more compelling than the game. Fitting for a show in
Chicago, Lawrence sometimes focuses on the Cubs team which generated the most
intense emotions – the tragic/heroic Cubs of the late 60s and 70s – a team
which unified a city in a type of long-lasting grief and sorrow which was only
expiated by Joe Madden and his guys of 2016.
Banks is especially tragic not
only due to his immense talent but also to his personal sweetness and
amiability. Banks never even made it to a playoff in a Cubs uniform. In 1955
Banks hit 44 home runs as a shortstop – the most ever for that position, at
that time. From 1955 to 1960 nobody in baseball hit more home runs than he did,
not even Mickey Mantle. Apparently, ownership was making a yearly profit due to
television and gate revenues and did not think a World Series Championship was worth
pursuing. People came to Wrigley because it was the most beautiful ballpark in
the world and a great way to spend an afternoon in the breezy sunlight. Management
primarily needed warm bodies and a star here and there to consistently cash in.
The Cubs apparently signed Ernie Banks from the Kansas City Monarchs of the Negro
League because they witnessed how Hank Aaron brought people to the Milwaukee ballpark
to see that guy from the Negro League.
So the great players in Cub
history were often like famous actors brought in for crappy Broadway plays to
increase attendance. Back in the day, people went to see Man of La Mancha
for Robert Goulet, and people went to Wrigley Field to watch Ernie or Ron or
Ryno or Gracie. The Cubs once brought in a guy named Dave Kingman (King Kong
Kingman), who always tried to hit home runs. He either struck out or hit a
homer, there seemed no in-between. His effect on fans was, however, electric.
Every time Kingman came to bat the crowd went wild, standing up to see whether
Kingman would strike out or hit a homer, even if the Cubs were losing badly.
When the Cubs traded batting champion Bill Madlock for a washed-up but famous Bobby
Murcer, Wrigley patrons embraced the ex-Yankee. The washed-up but famous ex-Yankee,
Joe Pepitone, ultimately replaced Ernie Banks.
The “reserve clause” bound
players to teams, sometimes forever and unless Cubs management did something
stupid (as they sometimes did – like trading Lou Brock for Ernie Broglio)
players were stuck on their teams and we were stuck with them. Then, however,
came the late 60s, and management discovered it had the makings of a great team
and brought in a famous manager, Leo Durocher. But even Durocher couldn’t guide
a team to a championship missing a bullpen and playing all their home games in
the hot sun. There were truly outstanding players who died on the vine…Kessinger,
Beckert, Williams, “Gentleman Jim” Hickman, Santo, Banks, Hundley, Jenkins…perhaps
no team had better position players. Four of these guys would make the Hall of
Fame and others were All Stars. They played their hearts out in the scorching
sun only to fall to a New York Mets team with supernatural pitching and night
baseball.
Lawrence paints Banks playing at
Ebbets Field. Ernie is without a batting helmet, as the helmet only became
mandatory in 1970. I love that the third baseman has crept in on the grass as
Banks must have once been a speedster who might trick you with an occasional
bunt. This is when Ernie was a world-beater, not the later Ernie when his
skills were in decline but he held on anyway as long as he could. Ebbets Field
was Jackie Robinson’s home turf and Banks had been the first African American
player for the Cubs. Indeed, the Cubs waited too long to begin accepting
players of color and this may have been one reason for their prolonged failure
after World War II.
We see Banks taking a swing. As
is the case with many of Lawrence’s baseball paintings, we can partly
experience the tension we feel when a player is at bat – is he about to miss,
hit a home run, pop out…we don’t know. There is the element of greatness
present but also the element of chance. In baseball, the great ones seem to
dominate the element of chance more than others. The great players Lawrence
depicts are usually shown in mundane moments like the painting of Ted Williams getting
ready to bat in front of Yogi Berra. She is painting the raw electricity of the
players. She is painting what made us involuntarily stand up and go wild when
the players entered the batters’ box.
There is another painting
depicting Santo somewhat abstractly at third base. Santo is poised, isolated
among an immense desert of infield dirt, alone and competent. A competent,
dedicated guy regardless of how much his organization sucked, regardless of how
little he was being paid. We can see from the shadows that the glaring sun is
almost directly above him – the relentless Wrigley Field summer sun which wore
the players down and was significantly accountable for their not reaching the
heights they could have. In 1968 the sun was responsible for Cubs second
baseman Glenn Beckert going from 190lbs. at the beginning of the season to
173lbs. at the end. It was like the great Cubs players were battling the very
elements of nature along with the incompetence of their management and the Mets
pitching staff.
Please look at Margie’s web page to see some amazing baseball art and to learn how she started doing this.
Some
of my other favorites by Lawrence include the painting of the Satchel Paige
traveling baseball show, which commemorates the Negro League. There is a great semi-abstract
rendition of Willie Mays making “the catch” in the 1954 World Series. Colors
are blurred to approximate, perhaps, the frenzy of emotions felt as Mays desperately
chased after the ball and then did the impossible. And I love the painting of Roberto
Clemente sliding so hard into a base that his big velvety Pirates helmet came
off. Why did the Pirates have those fuzzy helmets in the 70s? Disco era
helmets?
In Cubs World Series Bench,
Lawrence has drawn three of the players essential for overcoming the curse (bad
management) that had stopped the Cubs from winning a World Series for over 100
years. It took a right-wing, Republican billionaire with ties to Trump to put
together the type of organization and team necessary to finally win a World
Series (and save Wrigley Field). In Democratic Chicago, the city supported the
Cubs regardless. I guess only the charisma of Bryzzo and company could have
done that. Where are they now? The Republican business family disbanded the
team and cast our heroes to the wind. Baseball just seemed less of a business
in its golden age, although it was the players who suffered financially for the
sense of family many teams seemingly created through the reserve clause. For
example, Ernie Banks made about $680,000 in 19 years as a player.