Shoeless Joe Jackson – Not Guilty Painting

Not Guilty: Edgar J. Brown’s Triumphant Portrait of Shoeless Joe Jackson the Painting – A Window Through Time

“Not Guilty” is a 40″ × 30″ original acrylic work of art on museum-quality canvas, hand-painted and copyrighted 2024 by Edgar J. Brown.

The composition is built around a dramatic circular portal that frames Joe Jackson at the exact moment he crushes his home run in the 1919 World Series – bat still finishing its mighty arc, body coiled with power, eyes fierce with focus. Through that circle the viewer is transported straight into Comiskey Park that October afternoon: the packed stands, the haze of cigar smoke, the electric energy of the Fall Classic. Outside the circle, the canvas is collaged with layers of sepia-toned newspaper headlines from 1920–1921, yellowed and aged like actual newsprint from the era. One headline screams in bold capitals: NOT GUILTY. Others carry the familiar stories of the trial, the scandal, the ban. Hidden among the dates and box scores are subtle “angel numbers” meaningful to the artist – 222, 333, 555 – quietly woven into batting averages, uniform numbers, and World Series tickets. These private spiritual signatures give the painting an additional layer of personal redemption and divine timing.

Shoeless Joe Jackson – One of Baseball’s Greatest Pure Hitters

 Joe Jackson remains the third-highest lifetime batter in major-league history (.356), behind only Ty Cobb and Rogers Hornsby. In the infamous 1919 World Series he hit .375 – highest of any player on either team – with 12 hits, 6 RBI, the only home run hit by a White Sox player in the entire Series, and a perfect fielding percentage.

The Chicago White Sox played the Cincinnati Reds in the 1919 World Series. The Reds won the best-of-nine series 5 games to 3, a result that later became infamous as the Black Sox Scandal when it was revealed that eight White Sox players had conspired with gamblers to intentionally lose the series. (Despite the fix, Joe Jackson and several others still performed at a very high level, which has fueled the debate about their guilt and punishment for over a century.)

A jury of his peers found him and his seven teammates not guilty of conspiracy to defraud the public and injure the business of Charles Comiskey and organized baseball. Yet the next day, newly appointed Commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis banned all eight men for life for allegedly taking money to lose the world series, a decision that stood for over a century. The story became American legend through books, documentaries, and most famously the 1988 film Eight Men Out.

Justice Delayed; Justice Delivered – Reinstatement in 2025

 On May 13, 2025, Commissioner Rob Manfred officially removed Shoeless Joe Jackson, Pete Rose, and all other deceased players from Major League Baseball’s permanently ineligible list. After 104 years, Joe Jackson is once again in good standing with the game he loved and is now fully eligible for induction into the National Baseball Hall of Fame. The reinstatement finally aligns the legal verdict of 1921 (“Not Guilty”) with baseball’s official record. For the first time since 1920, the door to Cooperstown is open to one of the greatest natural hitters the sport has ever seen.

The Artist – Edgar J. Brown

 Edgar J. Brown paints with a distinctive style and impressionistic backgrounds that blends hyper-realism, historical collage, and spiritual symbolism in this fine art original painting. His portraits pull you in – “Not Guilty” was a deeply personal special commission for a dear collector who recently passed. Brown has long believed Jackson was wronged by history and felt the painting was guided by something larger than himself – the angel numbers are his quiet testimony to that conviction. This is more than a baseball painting. It is a declaration of vindication, a celebration of redemption, and – now, in late 2025 – a prophecy fulfilled.

Welcome back, Joe.
The verdict is finally unanimous: Not Guilty.