“Dogs Playing Poker” by Cassius Coolidge

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“Dogs Playing Poker” is a series of oil paintings created by American artist James Abbot McNeill Whistler, often mistakenly attributed to Cassius Coolidge. The paintings depict dogs in poses that mimic human poker players and are known for their humor and keen observation of human behavior. There are multiple versions of these paintings, with the first one created around 1895.

Prompt
Dogs Playing Poker by Cassius Coolidge , James Abbot McNeill Whistler, Cassius Coolidge, dogs, poses, human poker players, oil paintings, humor, keen observation, human behavior, mistake, version, series, around 1895 HD, sharp focus, stunningly beautiful, cinematic photo, 35mm photograph, film, bokeh, professional, 4k, highly detailed

Negative prompt
verybadimagenegative, bad_prompt_version2-neg, easynegative, FastNegativeV2, drawing, painting, crayon, sketch, graphite, impressionist, noisy, blurry, soft, deformed, ugly, extra eyes, bad eyes, ugly eyes, imperfect eyes, deformed pupils, deformed iris, cross-eyed, poorly drawn face, bad face, fused face, ugly face, worst face, unrealistic skin texture, out of frame, poorly drawn hands, cloned face, double face, blurry, bad quality

This is how the PixelAlchemy image generation model “sees” the “Dogs Playing Poker” painting by Cassius Coolidge.

Text model: qwen2.5

Image model: PixelAlchemy