Answer:
comedy-audiences laugh and get a temporary escape from the problems of daily life
horror-audiences experience a sense of fear and panic
drama-audiences identify with the characters’ feelings and struggles
HOPE THAT HELPS
Explanation:
HAVE A GOOD DAY
CAN I HAVE BRAIN
Answer:
identification of any real-life people on witch the fictional characters are based
Hello there! i agree, drawing hands is SO hard!!
What i usually do is draw a circle as a base, lines symbolizing the fingers and their positions. For example, a peace sign would be two fingers sticking out the center, then the other three curved in the middle. Then I draw a sleeve around the circle and erase the excess lines. (This helps to make it look neater and easier to progress, at least for me.) Then draw finger looking shapes (ovals with a pointy-ish tip) around the original lines, and erase the excess lines when you're done.
I'm not that good of an artist, so this might not be the best method, but it's easy to start from. (I do more digital art, so it's pretty different there) But anyways, I hope this was helpful! :D
1. Works of art are the products of multiple forces at work B. simultaneously. All of these forces work together (for example, inspiration, talent, ideas...) to create a work of art.
2. Throughout history, people have created art for five major reasons, and the option which is not one of those reasons is B. as punishment. I don't see how creating art would be considered punishment or revenge, whereas its spiritual, historical, and aesthetic values are quite important.
3. The study of nature, beauty, and art was originally a branch of philosophy called aesthetics. It derives from the Greek word aisthetikos, meaning pertaining to sense perception.
4. Artists called Imitationalists favor the realistic representation of subject matter in works of art. As the name itself says, they imitate reality.
<span>Banjolin 4 strings 4 courses <span>Hybrid of mandolin and banjo
</span></span><span>Banjo,Tenor 4 strings 4 courses <span>Irish tuning same as octave mandolin tuning
i dont know if this helped</span></span>