Showing posts with label comic foregrounds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label comic foregrounds. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Dogs Play Poker

C.M. "Cash" Coolidge

Cassius Marcellus Coolidge (November 12, 1844 – January 24, 1934), was an American visual artist, best known for his paintings in the "dogs playing poker" genre. He was also known as Cash Coolidge (sometimes spelled Kash).
Born in Antwerp, New York to abolitionist Quaker farmers, Coolidge was known by the nickname "Rash" to friends and family. While he had no formal training as an artist, his natural aptitude for drawing led him to create cartoons for his local newspaper when in his twenties. He is credited with creating Comic Foregrounds, life-size cutouts into which one's head was placed so as to be photographed as an amusing character, common at midways and carnivals.

Cassius Marcellus Coolidge - "A Friend in Need" a.k.a. "Dogs Playing Poker" c.1910

 Important Works:                                                     

All were painted in the early 1900s
  • A Bachelor's Dog
  • A Bold Bluff
  • A Friend in Need
  • Pinched With Four Aces