“Stooped figures huddle into their overcoats as they make their way toward a football stadium. Under an overcast sky, they come in the hundreds, converging from every direction. The stands are beginning to fill with spectators, yet there is barely a glimpse of the football pitch itself. In the distance lie the faint outlines of an industrial landscape—mills, factories and towering smokestacks. This is the scene depicted in ‘Going to the Match,’ probably the best-known work by British artist L. S. Lowry. It captures the pre-match atmosphere of northern England in the mid-20th century. … Football is arguably the most popular sport on the planet, arousing strong and conflicting emotions. For artists, the game offers fertile ground, concentrating into 90 minutes a wide spectrum of human experience. That universality is what makes football such a powerful subject for visual culture ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup, the first to be hosted across three countries: the United States, Canada and Mexico. …”
Aramco World

Muralists Juandrés Vera, Dazer Ramírez and Peter Westerink’s optical illusion lends a worn pair of football boots a 3D effect in Salamanca, Mexico.
Football’s Power and Drama Inspire Art Around the World
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