<span>I could tell that this
question is from Freestanding Sculpture Art. The answer to complete this statement
is the following. In sculpture in the round, the division of positive and
negative space is dependent on the angle
the sculpture is being viewed from.
</span>
I hope it helps,
Regards.
<span> </span>
Answer:
He barely used any "texture" he didn't try and create a feel of a object using texture in his art seeing it was mostly abstract.
Explanation:
But he used pointillism as a theme as well as he used soft or blurry outlines with a pale diffusion of light for a impressionist theme.
Answer:
Smoke Signal is a Native American movie written, produced and co-directed by Native Americans. The movie tells about the cultural tradition of the Native American people. Thomas loves to narrate stories to others which is consider to the oral traditions of the Native American. Thomas starts by telling about the fire in which his parents were killed; then he narrates how Arnold took him for breakfast and then Arnold as a hippy arrested at an anti-Vietnam war demonstration. Each of his stories tells about how Arnold was but, in reality, he was an alcoholic which Victor knew it made him imagine his father in a new way.
Answer:
Leyster used tenebrism for added drama.
Picasso showed a single figure from multiple views for added drama.
Explanation:
- Cubism is preoccupied with the problem of the "object" that needs to be reconstructed, as opposed to the vagueness and impermanence of the Impressionist surface.
- Everything that relies on subjectivity or a particular and firm view must be eliminated in order to arrive at an overall, conceptual, complete variant of form ("If the senses deform, only the spirit forms").
- Picasso's statement: "I paint objects as I imagine them, not how I see them," supports this thesis. In Cubism, the influence of African art is also present, and the basis is the cube. The Cubists in the picture show simultaneously (at the same time) what we can really only see in succession (in the sequence of time, consecutively).
- Dutch Golden Age painter Judith Leyster often depicts middle-class Dutch people in work and in leisure in her paintings.