Giunti Editore

Combining vintage imagery or structural assets with deep text-based storytelling.

If you would like to explore this community further, you can check the active rosters and fight logs directly under the tag on the DeviantArt Platform. Share public link

There’s a recurring motif: a small, defiant bird perched on a ring post, watching bouts with improbably human patience. The bird is the artist’s witness, a tiny conscience who survives every storm. It’s funny, devastating, and oddly consoling—Lgis never lets the work settle into cynicism. Even when a scene feels final, there’s always a marginal sketch—an afterimage—where the fighters are older, sharing cigarettes, sharing apologies, or simply folding a paper plane together.

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Cassia's fighting philosophy was captured in her own words: "Fighting—wrestling as well as boxing—means hurting the opponent as well as taking the risk of getting hurt yourself, and not being afraid of either outcome."

Many LGIS pieces depict rings that defy reality: rings suspended over city skylines, rings inside gladiatorial pits, or rings surrounded by holographic audiences. This speculative design is where DeviantArt truly shines, merging architectural concept art with sports drama.

A typical LGIS boxing project on DeviantArt mimics the presentation of a real-world Pay-Per-View event. A standard high-effort post within this community generally includes:

Many artists in this niche use photographic, high-contrast, or somewhat vintage styles to make the imagery feel like a "lost" fight from a classic, gritty magazine, such as the LGIS Boxing Fiesta Magazine pieces. Prominent Creators and Galleries

The "LGIS style" on DeviantArt often blends nostalgia with modern digital artistry. Lgis Boxing Deviantart [new]

Because the genre is highly specific, much of the content is driven by commissions. Enthusiasts pay digital artists to bring their exact scenarios to life, specifying the characters, the height ratios (e.g., a 100-foot boxer vs. a 6-foot referee), and the outcome of the match. 2. Photomanipulation vs. Digital Illustration

The LGIS story—from its controversial 1970s origins in Munich to its ongoing life as restored art on DeviantArt—demonstrates how even the most obscure cultural artifacts can find new relevance in the digital age. Through the dedicated work of artists like bprofane51, the Liberal Girls International SportClub's legacy continues to reach new audiences, spark creative works, and maintain its small but passionate following.

Angie Simons, the club's captain, fought in roughly twenty-five contests, boasting a strong win ratio. She later reflected on her career with a mixture of pride and pragmatism, explaining that while the fighters conceded that boxing topless would increase attendances, they were happy to do so because their pay would increase proportionately. For her and many others, who were students in need of extra income, it was a valuable side job that allowed them to be both serious athletes and financially independent women.