First question is B I think hope I helped
Back before cameras, paintings were required and they took very long to create and holding a expression like smiling would strain the person. I might've been off topic but this is what i think it would be.
Of the techniques listed below, those which I most associate with the Renaissance artists are the following:
C - Chiaroscuro to make figures in paintings look real and solid.
D - Figures with pleasing proportion, accurate anatomy, ideal beauty, and physical perfection.
E - Sfumato to create a smoky or hazy appearance in paintings.
Whilst
renaissance artists did use the technique of atmospheric perspective,
this was not to create a sense of flatness, but rather the create levels
of depth within the paintings.
The answer is <span>a post–World War II </span>art <span>movement in American painting, developed in New York in the 1940s. It was the first specifically American movement to achieve international influence and put New York City at the center of the western </span>art<span> world, a role formerly filled by Paris.</span>