Answer:
The Gandhara School or Greco-Buddhist School of art was inspired on Greco-Roman standards.
Gandhara Art shows the ancients Greeks influence by many ways:
Greek god as protection: Buddha is always under the protection of Hercules (Greek god)
The Artistic beauty: Buddha with the same appearance as Apollo (the god of the sun)
Explanation:
Alexander brought from Greece his soldiers with Greek religious, ideas and the art, specifically the sculptures of Olympian gods.
The indigenous religion was Buddhism.
But the influence Greeks create a challenge, as Indians started to turn to the conquerors religion. As consequence, in an area called Gandhara, the Buddhists started creating their own sculptures.
But in the lack of a prior indigenous sculptural tradition, they imitate their Greek rivals. The result was an impressive Greek-influenced Buddhist sculptural design.
I would highly suggest False Profits painted by Mear One. I am a huge fan of political art, there is a video on YouTube you can watch where he talks about it while painting it. Or like I said really anything by Banksy or even Shepard Fairey ,Just look up some of their pieces
Okay, so each black note you see you put a number above it 1-4... the lines you see separating the notes are called frames... when you reach the end of a frame and see a new black note, you start over at 1 and count up to 4
Answer:
It's difficult to find evidence for your answer to this question, because Lady Macbeth says so little in the scene. She's distracting attention. Well, you could say this - depending on how you read the scene. She pretends to faint in order to distract Macduff's attention away from Macbeth and to avert suspicion from herself and her husband. She was an instrumental participant in Duncan's murder and deliberately pretends to faint to give the impression that she is shocked by the tragic situation.
One reading is that her faint is faked to distract from Macbeth's shaky story. But if the faint is real, it suggests she just now realizes the truth of what they've done, and is overwhelmed by her husband's ability to kill not only Duncan but also the attendants, and lie so easily about it.