The overwhelming emotion comes from its large size are almost 11 feet tall and 22 feet wide. There are so many different animals and people in the painting. If you look on the back wall there is a sketch of something that looks like a human/animal sort of thing.
There legs are about to get chopped off but they need to explain who is the real criminal but they don’t know who. The man in the right said I was in the food section. The man in the middle said I was getting a present for my son. The man in the left said I was about to finish my order. The woman ask the men’s age. The man in the left said I’m 34. The man in the middle said I’m 18. The man in the right said I’m 23. The woman found out who was the thief. The woman’s let the men in the left and right go and chopped the middle leg off
Answer: Hope this helps!
Explanation:
"Energy is about how the movement happens. Choices about energy include variations in movement flow and the use of force, tension, and weight. An arm gesture might be free flowing or easily stopped, and it may be powerful or gentle, tight or loose, heavy or light. A dancer may step into an arabesque position with a sharp, percussive attack or with light, flowing ease. Energy may change in an instant, and several types of energy may be concurrently in play.
Saying that a dance "has a lot of energy" is misleading. ALL dances use the element of energy, though in some instances it may be slow, supple, indirect energy - not the punchy, high speed energy of a fast tempo dance.
Energy choices may also reveal emotional states. For example, a powerful push might be aggressive or playfully boisterous depending on the intent and situation.
Some types of energy can be easily expressed in words, others spring from the movement itself and are difficult to label with language. Sometimes differences in the use of energy are easy to perceive; other times these differences can be quite subtle and ambiguous. Perhaps more so than the other elements, energy taps into the nonverbal yet deeply communicative realm of dance. "