This Left Bracket Fifth Round match pairs Winslow Homer (7-1, 75-28, .728) against Peter Severin Krøyer (4-1, 42-23, .646). Homer arrived by beating Bouguereau, whose 5-2, 52-31, .627 record ties him with Botticelli for the 9th best record of any exiting artist. Krøyer got here by losing, by a hair, to Thomas Hart Benton.
Winslow Homer
1836 - 1910
American
...this great painter of the American scene did not lose the edge when it came to the probity and drama of his art.... In works such as Fox Hunt (1893) and Right and Left (1909), Homer dealt with profound issues of existence, while in his paintings of the pounding surf of the Maine coast he brought nature to center stage.
- Smithsonian
- Beat the great German expatriate Hans Holbein in an unusually high-octane Round 1 match.
- Lost to Dutch master Pieter De Hooch by a single vote in Round 2. YOUR VOTE COUNTS!!!
- Crushed André Beauneveu in the Left Bracket Second Round.
- Decisively beat Katsushika Hokusai in Left Bracket Second Round Elimination.
- Crushed Ferdinand Hodler in the Left Bracket Third Round by another two-vote swing.
- Beat Pieter De Hooch with a dramatic grudge match reversal in Left Bracket Third Round Elimination.
- Defeated Frida Kahlo in the Left Bracket Fourth Round.
- Beat the unbeatable Adolphe William Bouguereau in Left Bracket Fourth Round Elimination.
Peter Severin Krøyer
1851 - 1900
Danish
The combination of Krøyer's technical bravado and the persistent appeal of his Skagen imagery have made it difficult for art scholars in Denmark to resist him; at the same time, however, the frivolity of content in his paintings has left scholars reticent to give him full credit for his creative enterprise. When the question of substance in Krøyer's paintings is taken up, the reference is often somewhat apologetic. "Krøyer is so masterly in his handling," wrote Krøyer's contemporary N. V. Dorph in 1902, "that he would have to reach great heights to match it with content of commensurate significance. And those heights, he never reaches. There is an undeniable disparity between spirit and hand in Krøyer's art."
- Nineteenth Century Art Worldwide
- Thumped Leon Kossoff in Round 1.
- Crushed American Jeff Koons, albeit with gentle lyricism, in Round 2.
- On recount, was found to have beaten Florentine master Domenico Ghirlandaio in Round 3 by a two-vote swing. YOUR VOTE COUNTS!!!
- Beat Georges de La Tour in the Fourth Round by a single vote. YOUR VOTE COUNTS!!!
- Lost to Thomas Hart Benton in Round 5.
14 comments:
Homer, to a great extent.
Homer
It's gotta be Homer. D'oh!
Homer
Susan votes for Homer.
Eh, sure, Homer for me.
Krøyer
Certainly Homer!
Krøyer.
Kroyer.
Gretchen says "Krøyer"
And Mariah says Homer, via Facebook. As does Chuckdaddy, by text.
Krøyer. Look at that beautiful garden!
Krøyer made a big comeback in the late voting, but in this Tournament it's tough to win after you've given up the first six votes. So it's Homer marching on leftward, with nine votes to Kroyer's five.
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