Answer:
See explanation for answer.
Explanation:
I’m not toxic, I’m just broken
If I scream too much it’s because I’m choking
On the words, I want to say
I’m not breathing, I know you think I’m cheating
But I’m not, that’s just a thought
If you wonder why I don’t reply no more
It’s because I cry behind closed doors
If you wonder why I yell sometimes
It’s because I drive me crazy inside
What I tell you aren’t lies
You just assume they are cause you’re not willing to look further
Heart hurter, yeah
( Yes, this is my original work. I hope this gives you some inspiration! )
Have a lovely night!
Answer:
Clouds
Explanation:
The marshmallows are the fluffiness of the clouds and the horizon is the sky. Hope this helps!
Andy Yoder, sculptor: “Many people take great comfort in the bathroom towels being the same color as the soap, toilet paper, and tiles. It means there is a connection between them, and an environment of order. Home is a place not only of comfort, but of control. This sense of order, in whatever form it takes, acts as a shield against the unpredictability and lurking chaos of the outside world.
My work is an examination of the different forms this shield takes, and the thinking that lies behind it. I use domestic objects as the common denominators of our personal environment. Altering them is a way of questioning the attitudes, fears and unwritten rules which have formed that environment and our behavior within it.”
Nancy McIntyre, silk screen artist: “I like it when a place has been around long enough that there is a kind of tension between the way it was originally designed to look and the way it looks now, as well as a tension between the way it looks to whoever is caring for it and the way it looks to me. Trouble is, the kinds of places I find most appealing keep getting closed or torn down.
What do I want to say with my art?
Celebrate the human, the marks people make on the world. Treasure the local, the small-scale, the eccentric, the ordinary: whatever is made out of caring. Respect what people have built for themselves. Find the beauty in some battered old porch or cluttered, human-scale storefront, while it still stands.”
Answer: This piece is by German artist Anselm Keifer, and is entitled, Heath of the Brandenburg March. The artist chose to use a mixed media of oil, acrylic, and shellac, which he painted onto burlap. The artist was coming to grips with his country and its past. He wanted to create a piece that was rough and would convey a message of anguish.