Dogs Playing Poker

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File:Hisstationand4aces-coolidge.jpg
His Station and Four Aces by C. M. Coolidge, 1903.

Dogs Playing Poker refers collectively to a series of sixteen oil paintings by C. M. Coolidge, commissioned in 1903 by Brown & Bigelow to advertise cigars.[1] All the paintings in the series feature anthropomorphized dogs, but the nine in which dogs are seated around a card table have become well known in the United States as examples of mainly working-class taste in home decoration. Critic Annette Ferrara has described Dogs Playing Poker as "indelibly burned into ... the American collective-schlock subconscious ... through incessant reproduction on all manner of pop ephemera."[2]

Coolidge paintings

The titles in the "Dogs Playing Poker" series proper are:

  • A Bold Bluff (originally titled Judge St. Bernard Stands Pat on Nothing)[3]
  • A Friend in Need
  • His Station and Four Aces
  • Pinched with Four Aces
  • Poker Sympathy
  • Post Mortem
  • Sitting up with a Sick Friend
  • Stranger in Camp
  • Waterloo (originally titled Judge St. Bernard Wins on a Bluff)[3]
  • Ten Miles to a Garage
  • Riding the Goat
  • New Year's Eve in Dogville
  • One to Tie Two to Win
  • Breach of Promise Suit
  • The Reunion
  • A Bachelor's Dog

These were followed in 1910 by a similar painting, Looks Like Four of a Kind. Some of the compositions in the series are modeled on paintings of human card-players by such artists as Caravaggio, Georges de La Tour, and Paul Cézanne.[3]

On February 15, 2005, the originals of A Bold Bluff and Waterloo were auctioned as a pair to an undisclosed buyer for US $590,400.[4] The previous top price for a Coolidge was $74,000.[5]

See also

Notes

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References

  • Harris, Maria Ochoa. "It's A Dog's World, According to Coolidge," A Friendly Game of Poker" (Chicago Review Press, 2003).

External links