Griffin says that photographers “tap into something” when connecting to the viewer. This something is the viewer’s imagination. I think I have learned this because photography is being able to express what you want to express by capturing images that require you to use the techniques you know and the imagination of the viewers. In photography, you are creating an artifact that involves the viewer.
The following statement reads: <span>Total visual effect achieved by carefully blending the elements and principles of art. This would actually be known to be a "balanced" affect on this statement that would be read above.</span>
<span>The photo graph above is a picture entitled, the Ruins of Gallego's Flour Mill, in Ritchman. This picture is intended to:
</span><span>the damage from the huge fire.
(an iconic image of the fall of the Confederation and the total devastation of the civil war.)</span>
It's the Neolithic period in which we see in technology and settled life. It began 10,200 BC. Neolithic is also considered as the last part of the stone age. This period started some of the inventions like bracelet, etc.
Eliott Carter was an American composer, whose personal harmonic and rhythmic language led to the invention of the term metric modulation. The latter describes frequent, precise tempo changes. In David Schiff's book "The Music of Elliott Carter", it is written that Elliott Carter preferred to call it tempo modulation.