What is "The following"? No one will know. But if I had to guess, it would be a mixture with the old and with the new. For example, Fredric Chopin Composed pieces in the nineteenth century (That's when he was in his prime) but he mixed classical music with a twist that was different from other famous predecessors (Bach, Beethoven, Mozart, etc.). So I would say a mixture of the old and new. Or something like that. Hope this helps :-)
A because the people and object are blurry and not distinct.
The evidence on the ground revealed that roads were not part of some overall planned network. Rather they are the remnants of paths that moai transporters took as they walk the statues across the landscape,” they write.
While this helps explain how the statues were moved around the island, it doesn’t explain why.
The author regarding Picasso... is there a book or a text i can go off of?
Answer:
History. The "Absurd" or "New Theater" movement was originally a Paris-based (and a Rive Gauche) avant-garde phenomenon tied to extremely small theaters in the Quartier Latin. Some of the Absurdists, such as Jean Genet, Jean Tardieu, and Boris Vian., were born in France.
Explanation:
But in theatre the word 'absurdism' is often used more specifically, to refer to primarily European drama written in the 1950s and 1960s by writers including Samuel Beckett, Eugène Ionesco, Jean Genet and Harold Pinter, often grouped together as 'the theatre of the absurd', a phrase coined by the critic Martin Esslin.
The Theatre of the Absurd' is a term coined by the critic Martin Esslin for the work of a number of playwrights, mostly written in the 1950s and 1960s. ... The origins of the Theatre of the Absurd are rooted in the avant-garde experiments in art of the 1920s and 1930s.