Chicago Cubs Abstract Bauhaus-Inspired Squares Poster
Sports art doesn’t need to be in-your-face. It can be elegant, stylish, even thought-provoking. These large-scale modern-style prints can certainly fit in a garage or man cave, but they’re most at home in a dining or living room adorned by thoughtful interior design. With a focus on color and simplicity of design, these Bauhaus-era inspired posters will bring a beautiful flourish to your interior space, and show off your design-forward aesthetics.
The Chicago Cubs are one of the most famous sports franchises in American history, though probably for all the reasons that they’d prefer not to be. Established in 1876 as the Chicago White Stockings (and going through a period during which they were called the Orphans, believe it or not), the team would don the Cubs name starting in 1904. The late 1900’s would see a successful run for the team, reaching three World Series in a row from 1906-1908, and winning the last two. It would, of course, be the last World Series the team would win for over a hundred years. Nicknamed the ‘Lovable Losers’ for how non-competitive the team was for so much of their history, the Cubs did in fact play for World Series, at least in the fist half of the 20th century; Though they would lose seven straight from 1918-1945. An incredible 40 year postseason drought would ensue after the 1945 Series, the Ernie Banks and Ferguson Jenkins eras fully coming and going without postseason Cubs baseball. In 1984 they would be back, and while they lost in the NLCS to the up-and-coming Padres, Cubs fans everywhere breathed a sign of relief. It wouldn’t be until the second half of the 2010’s that the Cubs truly were to build a dynamic team again. Theo Epstein, he of the curse-breaking Red Sox, was tasked with rebuilding the Cubs into a juggernaught, and over the course of the 2010’s he did just that, building up one of the greatest farm systems that we’ve seen in the modern era. Anthony Rizzo, Kris Bryant, Javier Baez were the bedrock of home-grown talent, and shrewd moves for Jake Arrieta, Ben Zobrist and John Lackey were the icing on the cake (to split metaphors). The Cubs would put together a great run, making the playoffs five out of six seasons, but most importantly they took home the title in 2016 over a really great Indians team. The Cubbies had to rebuild in the early 2020’s, but with Epstein as the architect, it’s only a matter of time before they build it back up again.
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Printed on 10.3 mil (0.26 mm) matte paper. Framed options include mounting hardware.
Sports art doesn’t need to be in-your-face. It can be elegant, stylish, even thought-provoking. These large-scale modern-style prints can certainly fit in a garage or man cave, but they’re most at home in a dining or living room adorned by thoughtful interior design. With a focus on color and simplicity of design, these Bauhaus-era inspired posters will bring a beautiful flourish to your interior space, and show off your design-forward aesthetics.
The Chicago Cubs are one of the most famous sports franchises in American history, though probably for all the reasons that they’d prefer not to be. Established in 1876 as the Chicago White Stockings (and going through a period during which they were called the Orphans, believe it or not), the team would don the Cubs name starting in 1904. The late 1900’s would see a successful run for the team, reaching three World Series in a row from 1906-1908, and winning the last two. It would, of course, be the last World Series the team would win for over a hundred years. Nicknamed the ‘Lovable Losers’ for how non-competitive the team was for so much of their history, the Cubs did in fact play for World Series, at least in the fist half of the 20th century; Though they would lose seven straight from 1918-1945. An incredible 40 year postseason drought would ensue after the 1945 Series, the Ernie Banks and Ferguson Jenkins eras fully coming and going without postseason Cubs baseball. In 1984 they would be back, and while they lost in the NLCS to the up-and-coming Padres, Cubs fans everywhere breathed a sign of relief. It wouldn’t be until the second half of the 2010’s that the Cubs truly were to build a dynamic team again. Theo Epstein, he of the curse-breaking Red Sox, was tasked with rebuilding the Cubs into a juggernaught, and over the course of the 2010’s he did just that, building up one of the greatest farm systems that we’ve seen in the modern era. Anthony Rizzo, Kris Bryant, Javier Baez were the bedrock of home-grown talent, and shrewd moves for Jake Arrieta, Ben Zobrist and John Lackey were the icing on the cake (to split metaphors). The Cubs would put together a great run, making the playoffs five out of six seasons, but most importantly they took home the title in 2016 over a really great Indians team. The Cubbies had to rebuild in the early 2020’s, but with Epstein as the architect, it’s only a matter of time before they build it back up again.
Free Shipping on All Items — The price you see is what you spend.
Printed on 10.3 mil (0.26 mm) matte paper. Framed options include mounting hardware.
Sports art doesn’t need to be in-your-face. It can be elegant, stylish, even thought-provoking. These large-scale modern-style prints can certainly fit in a garage or man cave, but they’re most at home in a dining or living room adorned by thoughtful interior design. With a focus on color and simplicity of design, these Bauhaus-era inspired posters will bring a beautiful flourish to your interior space, and show off your design-forward aesthetics.
The Chicago Cubs are one of the most famous sports franchises in American history, though probably for all the reasons that they’d prefer not to be. Established in 1876 as the Chicago White Stockings (and going through a period during which they were called the Orphans, believe it or not), the team would don the Cubs name starting in 1904. The late 1900’s would see a successful run for the team, reaching three World Series in a row from 1906-1908, and winning the last two. It would, of course, be the last World Series the team would win for over a hundred years. Nicknamed the ‘Lovable Losers’ for how non-competitive the team was for so much of their history, the Cubs did in fact play for World Series, at least in the fist half of the 20th century; Though they would lose seven straight from 1918-1945. An incredible 40 year postseason drought would ensue after the 1945 Series, the Ernie Banks and Ferguson Jenkins eras fully coming and going without postseason Cubs baseball. In 1984 they would be back, and while they lost in the NLCS to the up-and-coming Padres, Cubs fans everywhere breathed a sign of relief. It wouldn’t be until the second half of the 2010’s that the Cubs truly were to build a dynamic team again. Theo Epstein, he of the curse-breaking Red Sox, was tasked with rebuilding the Cubs into a juggernaught, and over the course of the 2010’s he did just that, building up one of the greatest farm systems that we’ve seen in the modern era. Anthony Rizzo, Kris Bryant, Javier Baez were the bedrock of home-grown talent, and shrewd moves for Jake Arrieta, Ben Zobrist and John Lackey were the icing on the cake (to split metaphors). The Cubs would put together a great run, making the playoffs five out of six seasons, but most importantly they took home the title in 2016 over a really great Indians team. The Cubbies had to rebuild in the early 2020’s, but with Epstein as the architect, it’s only a matter of time before they build it back up again.
Free Shipping on All Items — The price you see is what you spend.
Printed on 10.3 mil (0.26 mm) matte paper. Framed options include mounting hardware.