Champ’s artistic side to be displayed at Muhammad Ali Center
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — When Muhammad Ali wasn’t jabbing or dancing in the ring, he sometimes liked dabbling as an artist.
Now, 15 drawings created by The Greatest are being donated to the Muhammad Ali Center in his hometown of Louisville, Kentucky. The Ali originals are coming from the foundation created by the artist LeRoy Neiman and his wife. Ali gave the artwork to Neiman, his longtime friend, as gifts.
On what would have been Ali’s 75th birthday, the LeRoy Neiman Foundation said Tuesday it will donate 21 Ali-related works of art valued at more than $500,000 to the Ali Center. The three-time heavyweight champion and humanitarian died last June after a long battle with Parkinson’s disease.
The donated works include two Neiman paintings of the champ, including his famed “Athlete of the Century” piece that has been on loan and displayed at the cultural centre and museum since 2005. Neiman, who died in 2012, said the painting summed up “the quintessential, colorful, confident Ali.” Other items in the donated collection include two pieces by Ali’s father, Cassius Clay Sr., and one that Ali and a friend drew.