The correct answer for 1 is <span>with bold, geometric patterns in contrasting colors
This is how Kuba artists traditionally did it. What is mentioned in other possible answers was also common but in other parts of the continent, not among the Kuba people. The masks were colored with blue or red and geometric patterns like triangles were drawn.
The correct answer for 2 is </span><span>They placed the oba in the center of the plaque and made him larger than the other figures.
This was done to point out how important he is. It is a common thing in religious art to arrange items like this and can even be seen worldwide and not just in Africa. It is a common way in art to address what is of the highest importance. The further away it is the less important it is.
The correct answer for 3 is </span><span>A) Artists created lifelike portraits with idealized facial features.
They made sculptures of faces that were highly realistic and were designed to represent what the ideal beauty is or what an ideal face would look in that society. There was no makeup added, just carvings of faces. It was in idea similar to ancient Greek ideal of beauty.</span>
This quote relates to the development of the Fugitive Slave Law developed during this time to attempt to appease both the North and South. It was meant to benefit the North, for example by giving them the territory of California as a "free state", a non-slave state with voting rights. And to appease the South, what became known as the Fugitive Slave Law, which obligated Northerners to return slaves who had escaped. The "irritant" is the fact that Northerners attempted to avoid repatriation and returning of the slaves, so while the South had given their concessions of territory, the North had difficulty implementing the obligatory return of slaves.<span />
Answer:
C) use its power internationally to further its own interests.
Explanation:
Henry Cabot Lodge was a former Republican Senator of the United States of America, statesman, diplomat and historian who hails from Massachusetts. Cabot served in the Senate of the United States of America from from 1893 to 1924 and had his voice strongly on issues bordering on foreign policies.
He was born on the 12th of May, 1850 in Beverly, Massachusetts, United States of America.
In the late 1910s and early 1920s, Henry Cabot Lodge argued that the United States should use its power internationally to further its own interests. Cabot led the congressional opposition against Woodrow Wilson's Treaty of Versailles and successfully ensured the United States of America didn't join or participated in the League of Nations.