
Kandinsky never appealed to me because he's too 'busy'.
Rodia I love two of the Ruszczyc's you posted, but the oxen picture in the middle looks as if it were done by a completely different artist. The ship is a fantasy ship, but look at the detail of the foam in the foreground and the immenence of the wave. This is like the trees in the third painting, they have an immediacy to them that is present in the water but not in the oxen and fields. It is really interesting to me that the oxen painting is the most famous one. I'm not familiar at all with this painter's work, but I find it hard to believe that the oxen painting is the most typical.
The other pictures that have that sense of immediacy (for me) are the Friedrich and the Whistler posted by Ber. Even though there is something muted and fantastic about the settings, the eye is drawn - Zoom! - to one specific point in the painting and it almost shouts, "Look at ME!" The puddles in the foreground of the Friedrich and the human figure in the Whistler. Color, I think, in the Friedrich and shape in the Whistler create that effect.
I'm afraid that I've wearied of classical painting. It was the only kind of thing presented to us in school ... we were never even shown a Picasso in Art History class much less real modern art! Just lots and lots of buxom, mythological women!

Jn