<span>Free jazz is the type of jazz music which developed
during 1950s and 1960s. It was invented and played by the musicians who weren't
satisfied with earlier styles such as bebop, hard bop and modal jazz, and who
wanted to brake their boundaries and create new, free approach to music. Their aim was
to extend, or break down jazz convention, often by discarding fixed chord changes or tempos,
and they often turned to collective improvisation. Although, free jazz is hard
to be defined, because it never really became the real genre with strict rules.
The most important musicians that are considered to be creators of free jazz
are saxophonists Ornette Coleman, John Coltrane, Eric Dolphy, Albert Ayler,
pianist Cecile Taylor and double bassist Charles Mingus.</span>
the answer to this is quarter rest
New technology and material influence impressionist Such as Oil paint in tubes allowed artist to work outdoors in natural light.
<h3>Correct option is (B)</h3>
<u>Explanation:</u>
Impressionist artist was one who gave importance to nature and made most of their paintings in the open air. They capture what they see with their eyes.
It was the invention of oil paints in tubes that allow them to move outside and paint in the open air. It was easy to carry those tubes. it made the vision of painters broad and they painted the realistic images. Impressionist likes the effect of light in there in their paintings.
Answer:
The Gandhara School or Greco-Buddhist School of art was inspired on Greco-Roman standards.
Gandhara Art shows the ancients Greeks influence by many ways:
Greek god as protection: Buddha is always under the protection of Hercules (Greek god)
The Artistic beauty: Buddha with the same appearance as Apollo (the god of the sun)
Explanation:
Alexander brought from Greece his soldiers with Greek religious, ideas and the art, specifically the sculptures of Olympian gods.
The indigenous religion was Buddhism.
But the influence Greeks create a challenge, as Indians started to turn to the conquerors religion. As consequence, in an area called Gandhara, the Buddhists started creating their own sculptures.
But in the lack of a prior indigenous sculptural tradition, they imitate their Greek rivals. The result was an impressive Greek-influenced Buddhist sculptural design.