They don't really have a where(???)
However the four steps of art history operations are:
Description: Ask, when, where, and by whom was the work created. You can get the basic information from the credit line, but you would need to do further research to learn about the artist.
Analysis: Ask, what is the style of the work? Can the work be associated with an art movement? To analyze an artist's individual style, look at how the artist uses the elements and principles of art to express personal feelings and ideas, and compare several works by the same artist.
Interpretation: Ask, how did time and place affect the artist's style in terms of subject matter, composition, and content? Find out about the artist's life and surroundings and which other artists influenced him or her.
Judgment: Ask whether this work is significant in the history of art. For clues, you can read what art historians say about the artist and make your own assessment.
Good Luck :)
Be Winnie the Pooh and wear a red shirt and yellow pants
Answer:
A shape is a closed line with three or more sides
Explanation:
Answer:
Because more than just a building, an architectural structure is a human expression. So, it must reflect the conceptions, not only of the time but the author as well. When an architect is projecting a building, he must think about how the audience would look at it, and the feelings they will have. A good example is the Gothic cathedrals.
Explanation:
Well, now let's see.
The architects who project for example the Notre Dame Cathedral were influenced by the art of their time (the Gothic, in this case). So, the structure they were rising should contain elements of this style, such as complex decoration, stained glass, statues ornamenting the entrance, the idea of reach the skies represented by the building's height, the flying buttress on the structures, and several other elements. And when people look at the final building, they will feel fear, respect, moderation and many other feelings. But these feelings were possible, ONLY because the architect thought about what he would put on the structure.