Open the picture in the graphics program right click on the default background layer and select duplicate. Click on the filter tab at the top of the page select blur and then Gaussian blur change the value of the pixels in the window that pops up put 20 to start but the number can be as necessary
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:
authorial expressiveness
Explanation:
According to Bordwell, the two principles that motivate his narrative in the aforementioned work, are realism and authorial expressiveness.