Artwork Page for An Afternoon at Max's

Details / Information for An Afternoon at Max's

An Afternoon at Max's

c. 1932–33
(American, 1896–1970)
Culture
America
Measurements
Sheet: 43 x 57 cm (16 15/16 x 22 7/16 in.); Image: 38.2 x 52.6 cm (15 1/16 x 20 11/16 in.)
Credit Line
Catalogue raisonné
Bassham 21
Copyright
Copyright
This artwork is known to be under copyright.
Location
Not on view

Description

Although Riggs supported himself by working as an illustrator for Fortune, Life, The Saturday Evening Post, and other popular magazines, he began making lithographs in 1932 and enjoyed printmaking into the late 1940s. Because he liked pageantry, crowds, noise, and the atmosphere of smoke-filled interiors illuminated by harsh, bright lights, Riggs depicted the circus or boxing ring with a stark, gritty realism. Perhaps Riggs was interested in boxing scenes because of George Bellows’s print of 1916, Stag at Sharkeys, which he might have seen at an exhibition of the artist’s lithographs at the Print Club in Philadelphia, where he lived.
A horizontally oriented lithograph in grainy black ink depicts a boxing gym in high contrast. Foreground left, a muscular man faces right. Centrally, two boxers in headgear spar, muscles flexing as they lean together. Behind them, another match unfolds amidst a cluster of athletes and spectators. Hanging lamps cast deep shadows, illuminating a "NO SMOKING" sign. Thin, reverberating lines delineate the ropes that traverse the crowded, atmospheric space.

An Afternoon at Max's

c. 1932–33

Robert Riggs

(American, 1896–1970)
America

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