Answer:
Hokkaido, Honshu, Shikoku, Kyushu.
If we are talking early early then it was because art wasn't a form of "art" it was a form of communication.
But a little later down the road, people did not understand the human body and could not paint one perfectly, and also painters loved to show perfection, as in, gold everywhere, or a kind a top a thousand bodies. Something like that. So yeah...
A sculpture that occupies three-dimensional space; a sculpture one can walk around or otherwise observe from every angle... The suggestion of three-dimensions on a two-dimensional surface. Also called implied or pictorial. So I'll say it's called Implied or pictorial
"Spirit of the Caribe" uses all of the following forms of expression except canvas painting