A Stag at Sharkey's

George Wesley Bellows American, 1882-1925
Not On View
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About the Artwork

At the same time that Bellows presents us with an image of a contemporary sporting event, he also delves into a theme with a long history in art. By focusing on the physical power and intense engagement of the two fighters, we are invited to see them as battling warriors, a subject that has been treated since prehistoric times.

For many years, public prize fighting was illegal in the United States but was permitted among members of private clubs such as Tom Sharkey’s Athletic Club, an establishment frequented by Bellows. Despite insisting that he knew little about the sport, Bellows depicted various aspects of boxing in his paintings, prints, and drawings. The subject was fraught with drama and alluded to more general concepts such as competition, battle, victory, and defeat. This print is related to a work painted by Bellows in 1909 and now in the Cleveland Museum of Art.

A Stag at Sharkey's

1917

George Wesley Bellows

1882-1925

American

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Lithograph printed in black ink on wove paper

Image: 18 5/8 × 23 7/8 inches (47.3 × 60.6 cm) Sheet: 22 × 27 3/8 inches (55.9 × 69.5 cm)

Prints

Prints, Drawings & Photographs

Gift of Mrs. H. G. Salsinger in memory of her husband

59.185

Copyright Not Evaluated

Markings

Signed on stone, lower center: Geo Bellows In pencil, lower right: Geo Bellows

Inscribed in pencil, lower left: No 13 Titled, lower center: A Stag at Sharkey's

Provenance

1959-present, gift to the Detroit Institute of Arts (Detroit, Michigan, USA)

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Exhibition History

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Published References

The American Scene: Artists from 1910-1945. Exh. cat., Krasl Art Center. St. Joseph, Michigan, 1985, p. 13.

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Catalogue Raisoneé

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Credit Line for Reproduction

George Wesley Bellows, A Stag at Sharkey's, 1917, lithograph printed in black ink on wove paper. Detroit Institute of Arts, Gift of Mrs. H. G. Salsinger in memory of her husband, 59.185.

A Stag at Sharkey's
A Stag at Sharkey's