Billiard Artwork

"Pool Player" by Tuuliky.
 

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"Zulu Pool Players" -- circa 1903.
 

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"Shooting Billiards" by Don Rust, circa 1932.
 

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Men didn't let women in the pool rooms in the '30s, yet a lot of their pool paraphernalia displayed women shooting pool. Go figure! :rolleyes:
 

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Players Magazine. Never heard of this one. :grin-square:
 

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Not really artwork but it is one of my favorite framed pics in my game room. It was an advertisement which appeared in Popular Mechanics in April of 1949.

1949_Apr_Hoppe_Mosconi_Camel_Ad-517x554.jpg
 
Great job AZB. Thanks for posting all those wonderful selections of billiard related art. Part of my attraction to the sport (I don't think of it as a game) is how dynamic and broad the view of people's perception is of it. Look how beautiful it can be! Thanks again all.
 
my domino design on a phil eastwood case.

I have it displayed as art.

functional art. :)

best,
brian kc
 

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I think I need the 7 from this guy. :eek: :wink:

best,
brian kc
 

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http://www.twainquotes.com/Billiards.html

Scroll down for the windows in Mark Twain's billiard room

I wonder why a man should prefer a good billiard-table to a poor one; and why he should prefer straight cues to crooked ones; and why he should prefer round balls to chipped ones; and why he should prefer a level table to one that slants; and why he should prefer responsive cushions to the dull and unresponsive kind. I wonder at these things, because when we examine the matter we find that the essentials involved in billiards are as competently and exhaustively furnished by a bad billiard outfit as they are by the best one. One of the essentials is amusement. Very well, if there is any more amusement to be gotten out of the one outfit than out of the other, the facts are in favor of the bad outfit. The bad outfit will always furnish thirty per cent. more fun for the players and for the spectators than will the good outfit. Another essential of the game is that the outfit shall give the players full opportunity to exercise their best skill, and display it in a way to compel the admiration of the spectators. Very well, the bad outfit is nothing behind the good one in this regard. It is a difficult matter to estimate correctly the eccentricities of chipped balls and a slanting table, and make the right allowance for them and secure a count; the finest kind of skill is required to accomplish the satisfactory result. Another essential of the game is that it shall add to the interest of the game by furnishing opportunities to bet. Very well, in this regard no good outfit can claim any advantage over a bad one. I know, by experience, that a bad outfit is as valuable as the best one; that an outfit that couldn't be sold at auction for seven dollars is just as valuable for all the essentials of the game as an outfit that is worth a thousand. ... Last winter, here in New York, I saw Hoppe and Schaefer and Sutton and the three or four other billiard champions of world-wide fame contend against each other, and certainly the art and science displayed were a wonder to see; yet I saw nothing there in the way of science and art that was more wonderful than shots which I had seen Texas Tom make on the wavy surface of that poor old wreck in the perishing saloon at Jackass Gulch forty years before.
- Mark Twain's Autobiography, Chapters from the North American Review, November 1907
 
Some of the best billiard artwork I've ever seen is that of Linda Pault of RT9. Many of you may have seen some of her work at either Super Billiards Expo or the BCAPL event at the booth that she and former WPBA pro Morgan Steinman run together.
 
Some of the best billiard artwork I've ever seen is that of Linda Pault of RT9. Many of you may have seen some of her work at either Super Billiards Expo or the BCAPL event at the booth that she and former WPBA pro Morgan Steinman run together.

yea i love the one with the biker chic.:thumbup:

finances permit after working on my bike this winter i want that pic as a wall mural in my game room.
 
Sorry about the bad lighting on Barney. Couldn't be helped.
 

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Thanks Stu...I had read the whole thread without one mention of Linda. She has an amazing assortment of original pool paintings, which are also available as prints, and also on t-shirts. Her original paintings sell for several thousand dollars apiece! I have a few t-shirts with her paintings silkscreened on them. :thumbup:

Scott Lee
http://poolknowledge.com

Some of the best billiard artwork I've ever seen is that of Linda Pault of RT9. Many of you may have seen some of her work at either Super Billiards Expo or the BCAPL event at the booth that she and former WPBA pro Morgan Steinman run together.
 
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