<em>Well, if there's no answer choices, then I'd say some benefits is you get to be creative and learn at the same time. Sometimes, it's best to just sit down at your instrument or online if you play a virtual instrument, and then just play away for some time and see what you can come up with. Maybe even record it and then analyse it later and see if you played anything you like and maybe make music out of it. Making Music can make a lot of money, even just making a cover for a commercial or something of that sort, of course that has its downsides, most notably Time. Sometimes, coming up with Ideas are just the horn-blowing of the battle, and there's much more to come afterwards. You then have to find time to execute those Ideas and then Revise them. As for the rest of the question, I'm not sure. But I am a Musician Myself, so I know a bit about this.</em>
When a viewer suggested that one of Adams' photographs looked abstract, Adams corrected him- "I prefer the term 'extract' over 'abstract', since I cannot change the optical realities but only manage them."
Answer:
It is an accessible form of propaganda and communication.
Explanation:
Many different religions use art to spread their belief. Places of worship are decorated both internally and externally with images and iconography of religious elements, to connect people with the divine, and encourage/remind them of the faithful path. It is also a sort of propaganda, an easy way of communicating the complex ideas that are faith and belief. Some of the religions that chose this approach are Christianity, Buddhism, and Hinduism.