There should be options to choose from for this question. I managed to find them elsewhere. The options are:
A: They have symmetrical balance and detailed forms.
B: They have highly textured details and lots of colors.
C: They have ambiguous space and cropped forms.
D: They have lots of patterns and objects centered on the paper.
The correct answer is B. Japanese ukiyo-e woodblock prints have highly textured details and lots of color. The woodblock prints usually depicted landscapes, tales from history, scenes from the Kabuki theatre, as well as courtesans, geisha and other aspects of everyday city life. Ukiyo-e became the dominant art movement in Japan during the 17th century, where it was appreciated above all as a colorful form of decorative art.
Ha lives in a war-torn country. How does she hope her life will be turned inside out?” Listen for students to refer to the second stanza on page 4: she hopes that soldiers will no longer patrol the neighborhood, she can jump rope after dark, and she will not have to hide from danger.
Answer:balance
Explanation:Balance is a state of looking at things in a broader balanced view , in this case we can see the balance between small and big with no exception of what comes first but looking at all things as equally important and nothing deserving node than the other. This is how we obtain a state of tranquility.
Answer:
Sorry for the late response! Hope this helps! I put the parenthesis in there as well to show what isn't technically there, but you would still play the note if that makes sense. So in order to count notes you would start with 1 2 3 4 as quarter notes. 1 + 2+ 3+ 4+ is eighth notes. 1 e a 2 e a 3 e a 4 e a as triplets. And lastly 1e+a 2e+a 3e+a 4e+a for 16th notes.
Explanation:
16- 1+(2) +3(+)(4) +
17- 1+(2+3+4+)
18- 1 2 (3) 4 +
19- 1 (2) (rest 3 4)
20- 1+ (rest 2) + 3 (4) +
21- 1 + (2 3 4)
22- 1 2 (3) 4+
23- 1 (2)(rest 3 4)
24. 1+ (2) + 3+ 4
25. 1 + (2) + 3+ 4
If you were to read this exactly how it is on the page, you would only read what I didn't put in parenthesis.
Answer:
yes, the cursed 9th symphony. get's em every time
Explanation:
Ludwig van Beethoven, Franz Schubert, Antonín Dvorák, Anton Bruckner, Gustav Mahler, Kurt Atterberg, Ralph Vaughan Williams, Roger Sessions, Egon Wellesz, Alexander Glazunov, and Malcolm Arnold
all died on their 9th. smh