There are many ways an artist can create a sense of movement in a piece of artwork, from blurring the back of a character to show movement, or showing the movement through air waves, arrows, and others. They can also make the character look like it is moving, and make the ground have more lines parallel to the movement, which will show movement.
hope this helps
A. making collage fine art
She was a painter and sculptor but she was best known for her collages.
<span>All Native American tribes used natural pigments; the very concept of chemical pigments had not even been invented yet when Indians still roamed free. And all tribes created hand shaped pottery because they had no access to machinery to do it for them.
Southwest tribes include: Apache, Comanche, Havasupai, Hopi, Jemez, Kiowa, Lipan, Maricopa, Mohave, Navaho, Paiute, Papago, Panamint, Pecos, Pima, Pueblo, Shoshoni, Soaipuri, Tewa, Ute, Walapai, Yavapai, Yuma and Zuni
While all of them produced hand shaped pottery decorated with natural pigments, most did so for their own use within the tribe. The first and perhaps most famous of the tribes to trade heavily in pottery were the Maricopa. Others soon followed the Maricopa example such as the Navaho which became even more famous for their jewelry than their pottery.</span>
I think your answer should be the presidency
(You think you know about music, but then when you try to describe these intrinsic things, it becomes difficult! Ok, let me give this a stab!)
Saxophone : The sax has a floaty, more round timbre, as compared to something more direct like a clarinet. Its distinct reediness and tendency towards a rich vibrato give it a jazzy effect when composers use it in music, even in a non-jazz song like Ravel's Bolero.
Tuba : The tuba is the giant of the brass section, and it has a heavy, almost blatty timbre. It's not known for its agility, just for its reliable bassline, and incorporating tuba can give the music a polka-like effect or just a solid undertone in the low decibel region.
Banjo : The banjo is the earthy cousin to the guitar. Its timbre is best suited to folk music or peppy country songs because of the unique strum of each note.
Harp : The harp has an attack and sustain very similar to the piano, and its tambre is similar to a cross between a piano and a string pizzicato. That's how I like to think about it. Use of it in music gives it a dreamy quality, especially because of the massive scales harpists can pull off.
Xylophone: The timbre of the xylophone, as pitched percussion, carries through a section. If composers mean to include it, they had better be ready to have it dominate, because its clear attack and maintained tone will stand out.