Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema
1836 - 1912
Dutch; worked in England
- Lost narrowly to Albrecht Altdorfer in Round 1.
- Defeated Jacopo Amigoni easily in Left Bracket First-Round Elimination.
- Defeated seventeenth-century Roman sculptor Alessandro Algardi in the Left Bracket Second Round.
- Tied with Josef Albers in an especially goofy Left Bracket Second Round Elimination match. YOUR SINGLE VOTE COUNTS!!
- Trounced Hans Baldung in the tiebreak.
Max Beckmann
1884 - 1950
German; worked in Netherlands and U.S.
- Defeated Gentile Bellini in Round 1.
- Edged out nineteenth century Frenchman Frederic Bazille in Round 2 by two votes -- YOUR VOTE COUNTS!
- Knocked out by Jean-Michel Basquiat in Round 3.
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Vote for the artist of your choice in the comments, or any other way that works for you. Commentary and links to additional work are welcome. Polls open for at least one month past posting.
14 comments:
I didn't think I'd ever vote against Alma-Tadema, but I am. There's something very appealing about Beckmann's work this morning, an intensity that draws me more than the exquisite languor of pastel dreamscapes.
Beckmann
I can't find anything bad to say about Beckmann, but I just cannot in good faith vote against Alma-Tadema in this matchup. There's something about these paintings that are just way compelling.
I vote for Alma-Tadema.
Tough one! But I'll vote for Alma-Tadema
Beckmann
Sir Lawrence!
Almost a toss-up for me. I'll go with creepy Beckmann-world over sunny Alma-Tadema-world.
Beckmann! There's tons of curious mysterious iconographic symbolism in those triptychs, although apparently Beckmann denied it. We studied "Departure", the one with the king in a boat, in school. Sin and salvation? Response to Nazi Germany? Beckmann's own forced emigration? Beckmann denied it meant anything in particular. Hmm, okaaay.
PS, "Departure" is at the MoMA, if you are ever in NYC...
Alma Tadema has grown on me, but not enough to beat the edgy flatness of Beckmann. By the way, Alma Tadema has a surprisingly interesting Wikipedia entry including childhood sickness, the gladiator, a rise fall rise, and a connection to candid camera
Here's an email vote for Beckmann -- "Max is my man!"
Alma-Tadema.
Oh hey look, I missed this one. Beckmann and Alma-Tadema have both grown on me a lot from low starting points. Alma-Tadema is fruitier than a box of tangerines, but I'm getting confident enough in my art history that I'm not so embarrassed by sentiment any more. Beckmann reminds me of a little bit of Tintin, except OMG WHAT IS CAPTAIN HADDOCK DOING TO THAT LADY?
Alma-Tadema.
And time's up: Beckmann will advance to the Semi-Finals, and Alma-Tadema will have to feel pretty good about going 3-2-1 in a Tournament where most people hadn't heard of him coming in. The score was 7-5. Thanks for voting!
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