5. Georges Seurat - Seurat is the least famous of the masters on this list but I dig all the little dots of color he uses to make a picture. If you look very close it is like a dot matrix printer using a whole variety of colors withing the solid colors. Very cool.

4. Henri Matisse - I like his use of color and curves. Like all artists or all types, everything he did doesn't light my fire, but for the most part, I like to see a piece by Matisse.
3. Claude Monet - Monet was definitely obsessive. Between painting the Cathedral at Rouen, haystacks and waterlillies a thousand times under a thousand different conditions, he didn't have a lot of variety. But his pictures are ones I can just stare at. Like Seaurat, each color on the canvas is made up of several colors. I get the impression that I would like to be relaxing at this pond.

2. Vincent Van Gogh - Here's a nut job for you. He never sold anything while he was alive but I like his pictures from the time of his life when he went mental. He used chunky brush strokes and deep colors. Here's a little Starry Night for you...

1. Pablo Picasso - Picasso did a little bit of every type of art and lots of it I don't get with. But I do like his bold colors and curvy lines. It's true, I did just break him down to something that simple, but art appreciation is no more than the appreciation each person has for the painting. Here's Femme a la Fluer for you... (check out my French language skills... that means "woman with a flower")

I also like his sculptures. Here's me with one at the Picasso Musee in Paris.

Tough break for David, Renior and Charles Shultz all being on the outside looking in. I'm sure they are all broken up about it. Good thing they don't have access to the world wide web.
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