Answer:
The Amiens Cathedral
Explanation:
<u>The Amiens Cathedral</u> also known as The Cathedral Basilica of Our Lady of Amiens is the Roman Catholic cathedral in France <u>famous for its beautiful Gothic design and rich details. </u>
<u>The sculptures on the facade and inside the cathedral are one of the main characteristics of the cathedral. </u>They are done mostly in relief, meaning they are attached to the background which is where the walls of the building.
<u>The central sculptures are presented over the main door and show the image of the Last Judgment. </u>That is the scene when the dead are raised by Christ, and so he is positioned in the middle, judging those below. On his sides are Virgin Mary and Saint John. Those who did well in life go on his right, to the Paradise, while the sinners are going to hell, on the left. <u>On the arches above and around the scene, there are dozen of angels, sculptured in relief. </u>
In 4/4 time a quarter-note gets one beat.
Answer:
Explanation:
"I Will Not Make Any More Boring Art," repeated in a neat cursive script down the length of a sheet of lined paper is clearly reminiscent of an old-fashioned school-room punishment. But just who is it that the artist, John Baldessari, is punishing? The lines are stark and simple, and like so much of John Baldessari’s art, employs a wry humour that turns on the art world, only in this case, the blackboard is a canvas.
Only a year earlier, in 1970, Baldessari underlined a key rupture in his career and one that was taking place in the art world as well at that time. Since the 1950s, Abstract Expressionism had been the dominant avant-garde style in galleries and art schools. For example, Jackson Pollock’s huge canvases, dense with paint he applied directly, were understood (however inaccurately) to be a direct expression of his internal emotional state.
In Baldessari’s art, words, photographs and paint offer visual statements that are so flat, so bald-faced in their directness and sincerity that they become ironic visual statements aimed at the very definition of what art is. And because these statements are on canvas or within a galley context, they challenge the most sacred theories of modern art, what the artist calls “received wisdom.”
Answer:
I believe 1 is Artistic Elements and 2 is Artistic Principal.
Explanation:
I hope this is right! It makes sense to me as an art student.
Answer:
my personal statement about my creation was the hardnest of sadness
Explanation: