Romantic visual and literary artists glorified things which takes us to problem number two: the "things" they glorified were hardly ever physical.
They glorified huge, complex concepts such as liberty, survival, ideals, hope, awe, heroism, despair, and the various sensations that nature evokes in humans.
All of these are felt -- and felt on an individual, highly subjective level.
Hope that helped!! :)
In my opinion, the correct answer is <span>D. stated and restated in different forms. A theme isn't of lesser importance - on the contrary, it often forms the melodic spine of a work, e.g. a sonata or a symphony. It may recur many times throughout the work, in many different forms, with a changed tonality, another key, extended or shortened versions... </span>
Answer:
Realism. If something is realistic , all elements look realistic.
The answer is option D - an object as it truly appears, without necessarily providing emotion or an experience
Hope this helps!! :)