| "It's
very hard to be a painter."
John
G. Ernst 1920
- 1995
Born in Brazil, little is known
about John Ernst until his years performing as an acrobatic clown and trapeze
artist for the Ringling Bros, Barnum & Bailey Circus during the late 1930's.
It is written that he performed with Burt Lancaster as part of a two man acrobatic
team. Drafted during the second World War, he served three years overseas. Arriving
in Woodstock in 1947, he attended the Art Students League under the G.I. Bill.
Here he studied with Fletcher Martin, and met his future wife, the poet Pearl
Bond, while she was modeling there. Exhibiting
often during his lifetime he was involved and participated in many shows including:
Gallery East, New York City, November 1953 Neil Lovisco Gallery, New York
City The Whitney Museum of Modern Art, in several shows throughout the 1950's
Albany Institute of History and Art, 1965-1966 Provincetown, Cape Cod art
Show, 1965-1967 Bard College, 1967 Berkshire Art Association, July 1980
Works of Art Gallery, Saugerties, NY Highland Park Gallery, Los Angeles
Shell Block Gallery, Woodstock, NY Maverick Gallery, Woodstock, NY Ann
Leonard Gallery, Woodstock, NY Mari Gallery, Woodstock, NY Collector's
Studio, Woodstock, NY Maverick Concert Hall, Woodstock, NY
Ernst also exhibited and contributed his energy
and time to the Woodstock Artist Association for over 20 years. He also received
the Yasuo Kuniyoshi Award in 1978. In a review in the Woodstock times, John Fenton
says of his work, "His watercolors have a fresh, imaginative, almost naïve
quality suggestive of Arthur Dove, George Geotz, and John Marin. It is intensely
personal and has a mystic air." In the same newspaper Ernst says of himself,
" I'm a self-taught painter in the style of Henry Miller
.I disagree
with the university concept of art, but not in a vicious way." Late
in life Ernst hit very hard times. His serious alcoholism, personal illness, family
tragedy and the loss of his home to a fire compounded his problems. He could often
be found on the Woodstock Village Green trading his paintings for drinks or pocket
change. Throughout these years he was in and out of jails, the Hudson River Psychiatric
Center and the County Poor House. He died on February 15, 1995.
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