Answer:
balance
Explanation:
Balance is one of the main principles of the design. <u>It makes sure that elements and forms on the art piece all coexist in harmony and create equilibrium in the composition. </u>
The elements of the art piece should be in a good relationship and have good unity as the complete piece.
This should be true, whether the balance is symmetrical (two sides being the same) or asymmetrical (different elements weighting differently across the art piece). <u>Balance makes sure that even in asymmetric there is good interaction between sizes, colors, and positions of the forms.</u>
Not sure about the 1st one, but it sounds like a cruel irony, or karma, where one does something bad, and later on the same bad thing gets done to you. Breaking the fourth wall is when a character in a comic, book, or tv show/movie talks to the reader, or states that he knows that there is an audience and he is just a character (comes from the old tv sets where there were only 3 walls, and the fourth wall was where the audience would watch in, and cameras would shoot: so when they "broke the fourth wall", they looked out at the audience and talked to them). Externalised conscience is essentially, as far as i know, when a character decides between what he wants to do and what he should do, and there are usually many soliliquies (excuse the spelling) while he makes the decision. Not sure if this is all 100% correct, but that's what my non-drama knowledge allows me, and hope it helps you out a little bit.
Answer:
The patterns depict birds, fish, animals and plants, in addition to providing detailed images of Roman ships. However, the mosaic also noticeable features like, rhinoceroses and giraffes, which were not common in ancient art. Mythical beings are also portrayed. Nothing is written on the mosaic; inscriptions are common in Roman-era mosaics from public buildings, so it is assumed that the mosaic was most likely part of a private villa.
Explanation:
I hope you get a good grade on this :)
The answer is B. False. The earliest liturgical play was not based on Christ's birth. The earliest liturgical play was based on Easter service. Liturgical Plays are plays done during the Middle Ages and usually takes place in the church. The play tells the story of Christ.