Answer:
By modern standards, nineteenth-century photography can appear rather primitive. While the stark black and white landscapes and unsmiling people have their own austere beauty, these images also challenge our notions of what defines a work of art.
Photography is a controversial fine art medium, simply because it is difficult to classify—is it an art or a science? Nineteenth century photographers struggled with this distinction, trying to reconcile aesthetics with improvements in technology.
Explanation:
<span>The correct answer is c. crenellation. The Colosseum has all three Greek orders (Doric, Ionic, and Corinthian) in its columns, it has many arches (think semicircular openings), and it has a post-and-lintel system (in which vertical elements -- like columns -- hold up horizontal elements, with large spaces between these two elements -- like arches). However, the Colosseum does not have crenellation, which is a battlement often seen on castles. A crenellation is a low protective wall on the roof of a building, with repetitive, squared openings from which people could shoot intruders. </span>
Answer:
The most famous early image of a human, a woman, is the so-called "Venus" of Willendorf, found in 1908 by the archaeologist Josef Szombathy [see BIBLIOGRAPHY] in an Aurignacian loess deposit near the town of Willendorf in Austria and now in the Naturhistorisches Museum, Vienna.
Explanation: