hi how are you doing I am not able to answer your question sorry
Answer:
It had a huge impact on African-American music as it was part of the mainstream.
Explanation:
The background to African American music is based on segregation. White America knew little or nothing of African-American music particularly the blues. It took British white bands such as The Stones to introduce this music to white American kids, covering artists such as Willie Dixon, Muddy Waters, Jimmy Reed and Howlin Wolf.
Motown was a different type of African-American music and quickly if not immediately became part of mainstream 60's American, indeed global music.
The distinctive sound of Motown, developed by Berry Gordy and based in Detroit, brought this sound to the ears of millions. Brilliant session musicians who never received proper reward, and a team of excellent song writers such as Holland-Dozier-Holland and Smokey Robinson produced songs which sold millions and developed acts which were at the forefront of 60's and 70's American music. These included, The Supremes, Four Tops, Smokey Robinson and The Miracles, Marvin Gaye, The Temptations amongst many others.
The songs also more latterly reflected the rising tensions within the USA at the time for example race riots and the Vietnam war. A notable example is Marvin Gaye's What's Going On.
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Although there are no options attached we can say the following.
In contrast to the consistently bright and flattened colors on the left side of the work, the right side is composed of only black-and-white images of varied values, suggesting that the artist not only wished to emphasize the process used but also was "intrigued by the actress recent death."
We are talking about the famous Marilyn Monroe's portrait created by famous pop artist Andy Warhol.
In this particular piece of work, Warhol uses repetition of Marilyn's photographs in the canvas, trying to differentiate his work from past paint approaches in the distribution of color. Warhol tried to immortalize the iconic figure of actress Marilyn Monroe, one of the most popular figures in the history of the United States.
Andy Warhol (1928-1987) was an iconic American Pop artist who led the Pop movement in New York, in the 1960s. In 1964, he inaugurated his famous art studio called "The Factory," where he made his art exhibitions.