The realistic aspects are that he puts all of his strength into a mighty throw and the anatomy of his body. The aspect that is idealistic is his face; it is calm. This wouldn't be the case if he was actually throwing it.
Feelings that are over looked is the feeling of suspicion
<span>Gulliver reflected Swift's views and values. He mocked his contemporaries with the lilliputians and the brobdingnagians, as well as the sky dwellers. Only in the last section of his book, where Gulliver lives among the horse society(can't recall their name right now), does he approve of the society's structure and values.</span>
To be good at art and know what you are going to paint and have oil paint
In my opinion, its what the artist is trying to write ''story wise''. Kind of like a comic book accept done all pretty. I can't tell you a ''correct'' answer of this type of question but i hope you get the main idea.