Is improvisational jazz to impressionism art as smooth jazz is to realism art?


So, I’ll acknowledge up front, I’m an engineer. Civilian and Warfighter lives can be in the balance depending on whether our company products perform as required or not. As a result, I try very hard to drive the entropic world we live in towards black and white as much as possible. I need to put order to chaos. When i look at art, impressionistic art requires a lot of mental work to make sense of. I just don't see it or get it, appreciate it or like it. I also find, as hard as i may try to enjoy improvisational jazz, that i don't get it, appreciate it, or like it. Instead, I love Realism art and instrumental smooth jazz!!
Reading from Audiogon forum pages for a couple of years now, i feel like i should feel inferior because 1. I don’t appreciate the free flow of expression that is improvisational jazz and 2. I love that there is a tune and thread in smooth jazz. I love the guitar artistry of Chuck Loeb, Chris Standring, and Acoustic Alchemy; the trumpet expressions of Rick Braun, Cindy Bradley, and Chris Botti; and the bass works of Brian Bromberg. 
I’m curious if there are many others out there that equate order (or lack there-of) in their music tastes to that of their taste in the visual arts?
Also, are there many other music lovers who would rather enjoy a good smooth jazz listening session than improvisational jazz?  If so, who do you listen to?
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I agree with Factory Records  founder Tony Wilson " Jazz is what you do when you don't have a gig"
As an european I always wondered why the americans have lost interest in jazz music, the only original music art form that came from your continent.
I know that there were many factors that contributed to that fact, like  social changes, the influence of tv and finally the influence of music industry, but to read some posts here that are are so unappreciative (even if you do not like the music) towards jazz is something that I really do not understand

Personal tastes aside, jazz is part of your cultural heritage and had so wide influence on art in general and on (music) art of other cultures that only a complete ignorant can deny something so obvious.

In this modern times where informations are so available, beeing ignorant is a matter of choice
@onhwy61 Kenny G has sold over 75 million albums. Pat Methany, 20 million.  All music is in the mind of the listener (does a tree that falls in the forest make any sound if no one is around).Play whatever floats your boat. Just don't make me listen to Kenny G.
Totally get what the OP is saying...

Have no answers but get it and wondered the same thing.

Has he really "castigated jazz" as another poster suggested?....I don’t think so.

Smooth Jazz is not necessarily Kenny G...to me it’s also Coltrane Ballads.
Kenny G?  Kenny G. is to Jazz, as Marshmallows are to nutrition. Sweet but no substance.  But hey, if you dig it..........