Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Home
    • Contact Us
    • About Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms Of Service
    • Advertisement
    Sunday, July 19
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
    ABS Africa TV
    • Breaking News
    • Trending
    • Africa News
    • World News
    • Features
    • Technology
    • More
      • Sports
      • Politics
      • Culture
      • Lifestyle
      • Travel
      • Business
      • Environment
      • Legal
      • Health
      • Cameroon
      • Ambazonia
      • AfroSingles
      • Environ/Climate
      • Editorial
      • The Leak Magazine
    • Donate
    Subscription
    ABS Africa TV
    Home»Culture»10 of the World Cup’s most striking images
    Culture

    10 of the World Cup’s most striking images

    IonosAdminBy IonosAdminJuly 17, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    10 of the World Cup's most striking images
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
    Post Views: 22

    10 of the World Cup’s most striking images – as historic artworks

    <img src="https://absafricatv.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/07/grey-placeholder-35.png” alt=””>
    Getty Images/ Virginia Museum of Fine Arts A composite of Team Argentina tossing Lionel Messi in the air and Tiepolo's Ascension of Christ (Credit: Getty Images/ Virginia Museum of Fine Arts)
    Getty Images/ Virginia Museum of Fine Arts

    As the 2026 World Cup draws to a close, the BBC rounds up some of the most stunning photos captured from the tournament – and reveals their similarities to classic works of art.

    Among the countless remarkable photos captured by international sports journalists since the Fifa World Cup 2026 began on 11 June, a select set has succeeded in searing itself into cultural consciousness. Why do some extraordinary photographs endure while others are quickly forgotten? 

    Perhaps the most memorable images manage to gain traction because we feel we’ve seen them before – or some semblance of them. They echo patterns of posture and gesture long fixed in popular imagination by artists, from antiquity to modern times, whose paintings and sculptures have shaped the way perceive the world. What follows are 10 of the most enduring photos to have been captured during the World Cup, alongside the masterpieces they recall and reinvigorate.   

    1. England v Mexico

    Getty Images (Credit: Getty Images)
    Getty Images

    This image captures the collective focus of a stampede of England and Mexico players, led by Harry Kane and Jesús Gallardo, as it competes for the ball in Round 16 in Mexico City on 5 July. It appears almost choreographed in its measured momentum. Suspending the scrum’s static acceleration, Julian Finney’s photo recalls the velocity and vectors of a modernist masterpiece: Umberto Boccioni’s Futurist formation, The Charge of the Lancers, 1916.

    Getty Images (Credit: Getty Images)
    Getty Images

    2. Ghana v Panama

    Associated Press (Credit: Associated Press)
    Associated Press
    (Credit: Associated Press)

    There is an unmistakably heavyweight knockout quality to Nathan Denette’s dramatic photo of Ghana’s Ernest Nuamah colliding with Panama’s César Blackman in Toronto on 17 June. Here, the ball appears to be less the object of the players’ efforts than the suspended site of climactic impact, as Blackman absorbs the full force of the body blow. For an instant, the beautiful game of football blurs into the sweet science of boxing. It echoes the crumpling, cruciform collapse of boxer Jack Dempsey, falling through the ropes after a punch by Luis Firpo in George Bellow’s most famous painting.

    Getty Images (Credit: Getty Images)
    Getty Images

    3. Bosnia-Herzegovina v US

    Reuters (Credit: Reuters)
    Reuters

    Hands on cheeks, his mouth frozen open in a distended shriek of anguish, Amel Emric’s affecting photo of a young Bosnia-Herzegovina fan watching in despair on 2 July as his country plays the United States, has familiar parallels. It appears almost deliberately to parody the history of horrified howls in art from Caravaggio’s defeated Medusa to Edvard Munch’s avatar of existential angst. 

    Getty Images (Credit: Getty Images)
    Getty Images

    4. Morocco v the Netherlands

    Getty Images (Credit: Getty Images)
    Getty Images

    Witness the rotational torque of Morocco’s Ismael Saibari, celebrating his winning penalty against the Netherlands in the Round of 32. The photo, by Carl Recine, seemed not so much snapped by a camera than chiselled by a sculptor. Hips sprung and shirt spiralled like a weapon, this is the instant after David in Bernini’s famous sculpture of the giant slayer has released the full fulcral force of his lethal sling.

    Getty Images (Credit: Getty Images)
    Getty Images

    5. Norway v Senegal

    Getty Images (Credit: Getty Images)
    Getty Images

    Justin Setterfield’s quasi-abstract photo of Norway fans performing their rowing chant during the Group I match between Norway and Senegal on 22 June is a vibrant mosaic of communal enthusiasm. The rapturous rhythmicity of reds recalls Paul Klee’s resplendent painting, Rose Garden, 1920, in which the joyous energy of a place is portrayed as a pulsing engine of synchronised scarlet strokes.

    Getty Images (Credit: Getty Images)
    Getty Images

    6. Portuguese fans

    Getty Images (Credit: Getty Images)
    Getty Images

    The eccentric instinct to elevate footballers to iconic status isn’t only the passion of pretentious art critics. This is clear from Thomas Coex’s photo of Portuguese fans waving a banner of Ronaldo reimagined in the glorified guise of a venerated saint. Fully kitted out in the paraphernalia of canonisation (including a luminous corona for a halo, green mantle, sacred staff, chalice and scroll), the portrait of “St Ronaldo” has been meticulously crafted to echo the contours of St Jude Thaddeus – the patron saint of lost causes.

    Getty Images (Credit: Getty Images)
    Getty Images

    7. South Africa v Canada

    Associated Press (Credit: Associated Press)
    Associated Press
    (Credit: Associated Press)

    Allow your mind for a moment to delete the trapped football from between the converging heads in Mark Terrill’s photo of South Africa’s Sphephelo Sithole and Canada’s Jonathan David. They were moshing for possession on 28 June in Los Angeles, appearing to be locked in an intense dance. At once individual yet fused, colliding yet diverging, their fiercely focused physiques call to mind countless depictions of tangoed intertwinement in cultural history.

    Alamy (Credit: Alamy)
    Alamy

    8. Argentina v Egypt

    Getty Images (Credit: Getty Images)
    Getty Images

    Buoyant both in body and spirit, Lionel Messi, as captured by photographer Carlos Barria, is hurled heavenward by his teammates after Argentina’s defeat of Egypt in the Round of 16 on 7 July in Atlanta. The flung finesse of the figure’s ascent recalls Tiepolo’s Ascension of Christ, c 1745-50, where the wonder of devotees, as much as the summons of God, is responsible for the miraculous levitation.

    Virginia Museum of Fine Arts (Credit: Virginia Museum of Fine Arts)
    Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
    (Credit: Virginia Museum of Fine Arts)

    9. Spain v Uruguay

    Getty Images (Credit: Getty Images)
    Getty Images

    There’s a fine line between concentration and consternation. The expression on Marc Cucurella’s face in a photo by Fernando Llano as the Spaniard fights against Uruguay’s Agustín Canobbio in Mexico on 26 June, is an object lesson in unflinching focus. The intensity of Cucurella’s stare rhymes richly with the penetrating gaze of Gustav Courbet’s famous 1843 self-portrait.

    Getty Images (Credit: Getty Images)
    Getty Images

    10. France v Spain

    Getty Images (Credit: Getty Images)
    Getty Images

    Lars Baron’s photo of Desire Doue in despair after France’s defeat by Spain in the semi-final on 15 July was especially affecting. The image captures Doue retreating behind the blue veil of his upturned jersey. For a moment, the elastic fabric, tugged taut against the features of his masked face, alchemises Doue into sculpted monumentality. The eerie effect inverts the unsettling dynamic of a genre of marble busts from the 19th Century in which skilled sculptors managed to make stone itself seem as sinuous and translucent as silken veils. 

    Alamy (Credit: Alamy)
    Alamy
    (Credit: Alamy)

    If you liked this story,– a handpicked selection of features, videos and can’t-miss news, delivered to your inbox twice a week. 

    For more Culture stories from the BBC, follow us onFacebookandInstagram.  

    Art
    Art and design
    Photography
    World Cup
    Features

    Cups Images Most striking World
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    IonosAdmin

    Related Posts

    The FIFA World Cup Halftime Show Was Filled With Sporty Style

    July 19, 2026

    World Cup 2026: What are the extra time and penalty shootout rules?

    July 19, 2026

    2026 FIFA WORLD CUP: History weighs heavily on Spain–Argentina Showdown, It’s European Champions vs South American Champions. – Africa Top Sports

    July 19, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Search
    Latest Post

    Ambitious ECOWAS Pipeline Initiative Links Nigeria and Morocco | Science

    July 19, 2026

    “Born here?”: Pearl Thusi’s backing of Chidimma sparks Mzansi outrage

    July 19, 2026

    UPDATED: Spain beat Argentina 1

    July 19, 2026

    United Kingdom Tourism Defies Global Uncertainty as Summer Travel Holds Strong and Businesses Pin Hopes on a Bigger 2027 Boom – New Update You Should Know

    July 19, 2026

    Enzo Fernandez and Argentina beaten by Spain in World Cup final

    July 19, 2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    ABS TV and ABS Network News is a leading Pan-African 24/7 broadcasting network delivering nonstop news, talk shows, lifestyle programs, and digital media content worldwide through Satellite, Streaming Platforms, and Roku TV.
     
    Based in the United States, we connect Africa to the world while empowering creators, journalists, and brands through innovative media and broadcasting services.
    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp Instagram

    Our Picks

    Ambitious ECOWAS Pipeline Initiative Links Nigeria and Morocco | Science

    “Born here?”: Pearl Thusi’s backing of Chidimma sparks Mzansi outrage

    UPDATED: Spain beat Argentina 1

    Most Popular

    United Kingdom Tourism Defies Global Uncertainty as Summer Travel Holds Strong and Businesses Pin Hopes on a Bigger 2027 Boom – New Update You Should Know

    Enzo Fernandez and Argentina beaten by Spain in World Cup final

    ECOWAS Backs Nigeria-Morocco Gas Pipeline Project | Science

    © 2026 Copyright. All Rights Reserved by ABSAFRICATV
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Services

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.