
The Card Players
1890
59% match
A Bold Bluff is among the most recognizable images in American popular culture and the centerpiece of Cassius Marcellus Coolidge's celebrated Dogs Playing Poker series. Commissioned by the cigar company Brown & Bigelow in 1903, the painting shows a group of anthropomorphized dogs seated around a poker table. At the heart of the scene, a St. Bernard stares down his opponents with magnificent composure — despite holding nothing more than a pair of deuces.
The genius of the image lies in its deadpan humor and keen observation of human social behavior, transposed onto canine characters. Every dog at the table registers a different shade of suspicion and calculation, creating a comic drama of deception and bravado. Coolidge painted a companion piece, A Waterloo (1906), revealing that the other players failed to call the bluff — a two-painting narrative that has delighted audiences for more than a century.
Originally created as advertising art, the Dogs Playing Poker paintings transcended their commercial origins to become icons of American kitsch. In 2005, A Bold Bluff and A Waterloo sold together at auction for $590,400, confirming their status as genuine cultural artifacts.
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