That is for you to decide.it is a personal question that nobody up here can answer except for you its a question about you not us
When you look at the painting, you can see a man who is staring at the distance. We can see that he looks pensive - he is deeply in meditation, thinking about the flow of water, perhaps, as the name of the painting suggests. He looks melancholic and immersed in his thoughts, and is mulling over the forces of nature and its effects. Maybe he is thinking about life itself, and it passing by like water in a stream. The artist designed the image the way he did maybe to make us stop and think about life and nature ourselves, and not rush living our daily, perhaps meaningless lives.
This is my take on the painting, at least. :)
Until modern times, art works have been primarily devoted to RELIGIOUS themes.
Answer:
During the 20th century there was a large increase in the variety of music that people had access to. Prior to the invention of mass market gramophone records (developed in 1892) and radio broadcasting (first commercially done ca. 1919–20), people mainly listened to music at live Classical music concerts or musical theatre shows, which were too expensive for many working class people; on early phonograph players (a technology invented in 1877 which was not mass-marketed until the mid-1890s); or by individuals performing music or singing songs on an amateur basis at home, using sheet music, which required the ability to sing, play, and read music.
Explanation:
Im probably older then you and I know this stuff.