It helps the artist create a meaningful exprience.
Answer:
Marcel Duchamp.
Explanation:
Marcel Duchamp’s oeuvre spanned many of the early 20th century’s key movements, including Dada and Futurism. Today, however, Duchamp is best remembered for his controversial work titled Fountain (1917) – a porcelain urinal upon which Duchamp added the false signature, ‘R.Mutt.’ Simultaneously outrageous and puzzling, Fountain is a seminal 20th century moment, removing art’s obligation to be aesthetically pleasing and calling instead for the intellectually provocative. Duchamp’s works were entirely expressive of his Dadaist attitude; alongside his literary, political, and artistic contemporaries, he revolted against the notion of artistic value and ‘fine’ taste, and advocated for art which appealed to the mind rather than the eyes.
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Answer:
Dome of the Rock is correct.
Explanation:
Muhammad was the founder of Islam. He was a social and political leader and confirmed through his new religion the ideas of Abraham, Moses and Jesus. He was born around 570 CE and died on June 8, 632.
After his dead he ascended to heaven, and in the place it is believed that happened, the Dome of the Rock was built; it's located in Jerusalem and Umayyad Caliph Abd al-Malik ordered his construction, using the same space the Second Temple of Jerusalem has used. The Dome has been rebuilt several times due to different factors and it's considered one of the oldest examples of Islamic architecture. It is also a UNESCO World Heritage Site.