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Champion Match Johnson-Jeffries

Portrait Gallery

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Object Details

Artist

Adolph Friedlander Lithography Company, active 1872 - 1938

Sitter

Jack Johnson, 30 Mar 1878 - 10 Jun 1946

Exhibition Label

Born Galveston, Texas
This German poster portrays Jack Johnson, the first black world heavyweight boxing champion, as a dignified athlete of magnificent physique. Advertising a film of his 1910 fight with Jim Jeffries, the image avoids the controversies the bout caused in the United States. Social reformers, who viewed the sport as barbaric, were successful in moving the event from San Francisco to Reno. The match, pitting “the Negroes’ Deliverer” against the “Hope of the White Race,” engendered bitter racial overtones. Upsetting notions of white racial superiority, Johnson’s decisive victory caused race riots around the country, and the film was banned in many American cities. Without reference to such tensions, this image shows an angular, honed Johnson, almost machine-like in power and precision. Produced by a Hamburg company known for its circus advertising, this poster heralds the emergence of sporting events as a major entertainment industry in twentieth-century global culture.

Credit Line

National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

Date

c. 1910

Object number

NPG.89.27

Restrictions & Rights

CC0

Type

Print

Medium

Color lithographic poster

Dimensions

Sheet: 94.9 × 68.6 cm (37 3/8 × 27")
Mount: 100 × 71.4 cm (39 3/8 × 28 1/8")

See more items in

National Portrait Gallery Collection

Location

Currently not on view

Data Source

National Portrait Gallery

Topic

Poster
Jack Johnson: Male
Jack Johnson: Sports\Athlete\Boxer
Portrait

Metadata Usage

CC0

Link to Original Record

http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/sm4bc8dfec7-519d-44a6-97bd-4261dbef621c

Record ID

npg_NPG.89.27

Discover More

illustration of boxer Jack Johnson

American Boxing: From John L. Sullivan to Muhammad Ali and Hollywood Movies

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