I've been to that museum. And remember that photo. Good pick.A new favorite - White Cat by Pierre Bonnard. Picture taken few hours ago in museum d'Orsay in Paris.
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HokusaiKanagawa
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Parrish, you say? I was always impressed by his mural in the King Cole Bar at the St. Regis in New York. And being sauced didn't hinder my appreciation at all. (That is I on the right, many moons ago.)I also love Maxfield Parrish...

Rothko is a perennial favorite of mine. His works are always in my short list for favorite paintings.Ask me again it’ll be a different answer.Has to be seen in person. No image I’ve ever seen even begins to convey this painting.
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Edward Hopper, 1956
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Frank Stella, Harran II, 1967
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Mark Rothko.
I love Caspar David Friedrich, his Monk by the Sea is on of my favorites.I am not well-versed in the art world so I don't know what makes a piece technically good or worthy of praise but as Brian says on his podcast, I am the expert on my own opinion and I've always found this painting to be particularly captivating. This is Winter Landscape by Caspar David Friedrich.
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This is one of my favorites as well.There is some mighty good stuff already posted in this thread.
Myself, I’m a big fan of American Regionalism and its offshoots.
Andrew Wyeth’s Christina’s World probably tops my list. It has fascinated me since childhood, and my wife gave me a very large framed print of it for my birthday one year. It has hung In our living room ever since. There have been countless times when I’m walking through the house on the way to doing something else, and I’ll stop for a moment and study it even more.
For me it elicits much of the human condition; drawing on both despair and hope, obstruction and determination, and how one’s own world can be incredibly small and yet massively expansive at the same time.
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