1. performing a task unconsciously = H. automatism: it means that you don't think about what you are creating, you just create - like brainstorming 2. Surrealists believed that artists needed to escape the oppressive control of = F. reason: surrealists created art which was not realistic, but something surreal, as their name would suggest3. the first truly public museum = C. the Louvre, opened in 17934. Joan Miro used the poetic technique of = B. Action painting5. Miro’s paintings seem to have no structure; they are = J. a free flow of images6. Gertrude Stein had to flee Paris because she was = A. Jewish: she was a Jew living in Nazi-occupied France7. Perfect modern artifact in Nazi eyes = I. the steel helmet: it was the first movie about war8. Survived the London Blitz = D. Saint Paul's Cathedral: it managed to survive unharmed for the most part9. The purpose of the art exhibition in Munich was to show = G. "degenerate" or inferior art: this art show is actually known as Degenerate art show10. Art approved by Third Reich (Nazi Germany) included idealized images of = L. labor, maternity, and family life11. Miro’s Birth of the World was a precursor to = K. free association 12. Like Pollock, Willem de Kooning was know for his = E. abstract expressionism: it is a movement where art is obviously abstract and expressed as something surreal
Answer:
Viewers
Explanation:
To a non-media professional, my listeners will be referred to as listeners since its a television program.
While Susato's place of birth is unknown, some scholars believe that because of his name—Susato meaning de Soest, of the town of Soest — he may be from the town of that name in Westphalia, or the town of Soest in The Netherlands.
Not much is known about his early life, but he begins appearing in various Antwerp archives of around 1530 working as a calligrapher as well as an instrumentalist: trumpet, flute and tenor pipe are listed as instruments that he owned.
In 1543, he founded the first music publishing house using movable music type in the Low Countries. He could be found in Antwerp, "At the Sign of the Crumhorn." Until Susato set up his press in Antwerp, music printing had been done mainly in Italy, France and Germany. Soon afterwards, Susato was joined by Petrus Phalesius the Elder in Leuven and Christopher Plantin, also in Antwerp, and the Low Countries became a regional center of music publishing. It is possible that Susato also ran a musical instrument business, and he attempted several times to form partnerships with other publishers but none were successful. In 1561 his son Jacob Susato, who died in 1564, took over his publishing business. Tielman Susato first moved to Alkmaar, North Holland, and later to Sweden. The last known record of him dates from 1570.
Beethoven was in fact not the first composers