I believe the correct answer is B. scene from everyday life.
The Pre-Raphaelite movement opposed the British Royal
Academy, which championed a narrow range of idealized or moral subjects and
conventional definitions of beauty drawn from Renaissance and ancient classical
art. The artists of this movement were inspired by the centuries preceding the
Italian High Renaissance and they depicted nature and the human body realistically.
Some of the examples of this movement are: “The Lady of Shalott” by John
William Waterhouse and “Ophelia” by John Everett Millais.
Answer:
water colour wash
Wet-in-wet painting
Explanation:
One tip for any watercolor wash: If you notice a mistake in a previous stroke, don’t try to fix it. Once the wash has started to dry, a new stroke will almost definitely be more noticeable than any small mistake. It’s best to leave these happy little accidents as they are.
Wet-in-wet painting is one of the most basic techniques — so basic you might have already done it before without realizing it!
The Oseberg ship<span> (Norwegian: </span>Osebergskipet<span>) is a well-preserved </span>Viking ship<span> discovered in a large </span>burial mound<span> at the </span>Oseberg<span> farm near </span>Tønsberg<span> in</span>Vestfold<span> county, </span>Norway<span>. This ship is commonly acknowledged to be among the finer artifacts to have survived from the </span><span>Viking Era .</span>
Answer:
The subject matter is the fact that someone, the artist, put different materials and textures into as simple of a object as a snowball.
The materials that were used were fur, and snow of course. The artist probably chose these materials to stand out.
The message that the artist is probably trying to express is that you can make art out of anything.
What was she thinking as she made this? Did she use her hands? Where did she get all the fur and how did she store it? How does she view this piece in her own mind?
The artists culture of "standing out to fit in" is relating to her piece of artwork because nobody would have really found this as a piece of art, but the artist displays the fact that anything can be art if you put your mind to it.
Hope this helped! Don't need to follow me on socials, but the other two I'll accept :)
The correct answer is the third choice: nationalism. Nationalism was, in fact, one of the provoking factors that caused the first World War.