Answer:A because a gesture drawing is a quick sketch and you don’t go into the small details and focus on the main details (like the posture of a person when you draw a figure).
The main purpose of a gesture drawing (in my opinion because I’m not sure how your teacher taught it) is to improve your observation skills and to train your hand to draw a figure in proportion and be able to identify the main elements (like the movement).
Explanation:
Answer:
Hugo Alvar Henrik Aalto was a Finnish architect and designer. His work includes architecture, furniture, textiles and glassware, as well as sculptures and paintings. He never regarded himself as an artist, seeing painting and sculpture as "branches of the tree whose trunk is architecture." Aalto's early career ran in parallel with the rapid economic growth and industrialization of Finland during the first half of the 20th century. Many of his clients were industrialists, among them the Ahlström-Gullichsen family.
The span of his career, from the 1920s to the 1970s, is reflected in the styles of his work, ranging from Nordic Classicism of the early work, to a rational International Style Modernism during the 1930s to a more organic modernist style from the 1940s onwards. Typical for his entire career is a concern for design as a Gesamtkunstwerk, a total work of art, in which he – together with his first wife Aino Aalto – would design the building, and give special treatment to the interior surfaces, furniture, lamps and glassware.
His furniture designs are considered Scandinavian Modern, in the sense of a concern for materials, especially wood, and simplification but also technical experimentation, which led him to receiving patents for various manufacturing processes, such as bent wood. As a designer he is celebrated as the inventor of bent plywood furniture. The Alvar Aalto Museum, designed by Aalto himself, is located in what is regarded as his home city Jyväskylä.
<span>Free jazz is the type of jazz music which developed
during 1950s and 1960s. It was invented and played by the musicians who weren't
satisfied with earlier styles such as bebop, hard bop and modal jazz, and who
wanted to brake their boundaries and create new, free approach to music. Their aim was
to extend, or break down jazz convention, often by discarding fixed chord changes or tempos,
and they often turned to collective improvisation. Although, free jazz is hard
to be defined, because it never really became the real genre with strict rules.
The most important musicians that are considered to be creators of free jazz
are saxophonists Ornette Coleman, John Coltrane, Eric Dolphy, Albert Ayler,
pianist Cecile Taylor and double bassist Charles Mingus.</span>
<span>Monteverdi has been credited for the Baroque musical style.</span>