Details
GEORGE BELLOWS (1882-1925)
Introducing Georges Carpentier
lithograph, on Japon paper, 1921, signed in pencil, also signed and inscribed by the printer 'Bolton Brown, imp.' in pencil, from the edition of approximately 50, with margins, framed
Image: 1412 x 21 in. (368 x 533 mm.)
Sheet: 1618 x 2314 in. (410 x 591 mm.)
Literature
Mason 98
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Lot Essay

On July 2, 1921, spectators crowded into "Boyle's Thirty Acres", an enormous outdoor arena in Jersey City constructed specifically for the highly anticipated boxing match, promoted as the "battle of the century". The competitors were French world light-heavyweight champion, Georges Carpentier, and Jack Dempsey, the world heavyweight champion. Carpentier, a decorated pilot in the French Air Force, was favored over the American, Dempsey, who had been accused of being a draft evader by the American Legion. The spectacle that had attracted over 80,000 spectators and generated boxing's first million-dollar gate was short-lived; the French pugilist was knocked out by Dempsey in the fourth round. Bellows, who was employed by the New York World newspaper to record the event, depicts the best part of Carpetier's performance: his "introduction".

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Tales of the City: New York Prints and Photographs of the Early 20th Century
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