Watkins’ basketball piece “Slam Dunk” and Williams’ piece “Satchel’s Monarchs,” on display

USSA’s Sport Artists of the Year

Watkins, Williams receive 2017 awards, works on display at ASAMA in Daphne

USSA.edu
Posted 12/12/17

Acclaimed sculptor Richard Watkins and nationally known painter William M. Williams were awarded the United States Sports Academy’s 2017 Sport Artists of the Year awards at the Academy’s recent 33 rd Annual Awards of Sport program

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Watkins’ basketball piece “Slam Dunk” and Williams’ piece “Satchel’s Monarchs,” on display

USSA’s Sport Artists of the Year

Watkins, Williams receive 2017 awards, works on display at ASAMA in Daphne

Posted

DAPHNE, Ala. – Acclaimed sculptor Richard Watkins and nationally known painter William M. Williams were awarded the United States Sports Academy’s 2017 Sport Artists of the Year awards at the Academy’s recent 33 rd Annual Awards of Sport program.
A highlight of the event on the Academy’s Daphne campus was the unveiling and donation to the American Sport Art Museum & Archives (ASAMA) permanent art collection works by Watkins and Williams. Watkins’ basketball piece “Slam Dunk” and Williams’ piece “Satchel’s Monarchs,” which honors the legacy of baseball legend Satchel Paige, are now on permanent display at ASAMA. In addition to the permanent pieces, a show featuring works from both artists is now on display at ASAMA in the Dr. Thomas P. Rosandich Gallery.
The Sport Artist of the Year Award is part of the Academy’s Awards of Sport, which each year honor a wide range of accomplishments in sport and serve as “A Tribute to the Artist and the Athlete,” in conjunction with the Academy’s American Sport Art Museum and Archives (ASAMA).
The awards recognize these men and women through the Sport Artist of the Year, Honorary Doctorates, Medallion Series, Distinguished Service Awards, Outstanding Athletes, and Alumni of the Year awards. Watkins was presented his award by Academy Trustee Jack Scharr. Williams received his award from Trustee and Art Committee Member Emerita Susan McCollough. Watkins’ work is known for capturing the energy, dynamics and balance of amazing athletes at that single moment of intense action: the slam dunk, the long pass into the end zone, the double play. He exaggerates the physical proportions to an extreme, giving them incredible action and an engaging quality. Watkins grew up in West Virginia, where he enjoyed drawing and sculpting with whatever materials he could find.
“Throughout my school years I concentrated more on doodling cartoony sports figures than I did paying attention to classwork,” Watkins said. “I did manage to pay enough attention to get accepted into the College of Design, Architecture, and Art (now Design, Architecture, Art, and Planning) at the University of Cincinnati.”

After college, Watkins worked in several design studios in Cincinnati before making his way into the toy design business. After 25 years designing toys, Watkins began to turn his old sketches and models into larger, more finished pieces of art.
“I love sculpture and I love sports. My work is an attempt to mix the two,” Watkins said. “Once I retired I began to look through all those old sketches and models and tried to turn them into larger, more finished pieces. “I know they don’t look realistic, but I’m not going for realistic,” Watkins said. “I’m trying to capture the dynamics and balance of these amazing athletes. “The exaggerated poses and proportions are how I see the human form. After all, what are athletes but real humans with the most extreme physical proportions making them capable of the most incredible action? So maybe my work isn’t so exaggerated after all.”
An award-winning artist, some of his most recent accolades include being named Best in Class at the 2017 Chastain Park Arts Festival in Atlanta. He also earned first place honors at the 2017 Metro Montage XVII at the Marietta/Cobb Museum of Art in Marietta, Ga. Williams’ paintings are the permanent collections of the National Baseball Hall of Fame, the College Football Hall of Fame, the Commissioner of the National Basketball Association, the New York Yankees, the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, the U.S. Naval Academy and the Butler Institute of American Art. He has won numerous awards, including the Lake Orion Art Center Award, Best of Show in the Art of Golf Festival in Pinehurst, N.C., and Best of Show at an Ohio statewide art competition.
A native and resident of Battle Creek, Mich., Williams earned his bachelor’s degree from Alma (Mich.) College and master’s degree from Boston University. He was a varsity athlete in high school and college and began his work as a professional artist in 1989. Williams has earned national acclaim for his sports art, but his work also includes oil and pastel portraits.
“My still life paintings are created to allow viewers to feel an emotion or memory that has been important to them,” Williams said. “The creation of these works allows me to express ideas that can be best relayed through images. All of this is done with the idea of creating a beautiful piece of artwork and at the same time represent the history of sports, teams and athletes. “Still life paintings I execute are created from life, using a large collection of items accumulated through many years of searching. I buy objects that inspire and help me envision a finished painting. It may be the centerpiece of the composition or a complement to other items already in my collection.”
Williams has been commissioned to create works of art for numerous significant sports events, including the program, ticket covers and limited edition prints for the 100 th Army vs. Navy football game; limited edition prints for Cal Ripken Jr. when he broke Lou Gehrig’s consecutive games record; the College Football Hall of Fame induction ceremony program; and an original oil painting for Darren McCarty of the Detroit Red Wings.
Other commissions include art for the University of Washington’s football program and the University of Oregon’s basketball program. His illustrations are featured in numerous publications and exhibitions around the United States. He illustrated “A Pitch in Time” by Robert A Lytle, a book which won the Benjamin Franklin Silver Award from the Publishers Marketing Association. He contributed artwork for the Chicago White Sox media guide and pocket schedule, the Bill Williams Calendar of Sports Images, the New York Yankees video scoreboard, the Oakland Athletics Magazine, Spitball Magazine, and the contributed illustrations for the book “Baseball: A Treasury of Art and Literature.”
His work also adorned a MasterCard credit card. Williams’ works have also been featured at the Butler Institute of American Art in Youngstown, Ohio; the Grand Rapids Art Museum in Michigan; and the Kalamazoo Institute of Arts in Michigan. He also has works featured at the Wandering Oaks Fine Art Gallery in Wimberly, Texas, and in the Old Sport Gallery in Pinehurst, N.C., and Harbor Springs, Mich. Williams has studied the arts extensively, including studying artists’ techniques at the Louvre in Paris, the National Gallery in London, the Alte Pinakothek in Munich, the Prado in Madrid, and the Uffizi in Italy as well as the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art, the National Gallery in Washington D.C. and the Chicago Art Institute.
Founded in 1984, ASAMA is dedicated to the preservation of sports art, history, and literature. The ASAMA collection is composed of more than 1,800 works of sport art across a variety of media, including paintings, sculptures, assemblages, prints and photographs.
The museum is open free to the public from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekdays. For more information, go to ASAMA.org.
The United States Sports Academy is an independent, non-profit, accredited, special mission sports university created to serve the nation and world with programs in instruction, research and service. The role of the Academy is to prepare men and women for careers in the profession of sports.
The Academy is based in Daphne, Ala. For more information, call (251) 626-3303 or visit USSA.edu.