Answer:
formal analysis
Explanation:
<em>Formal analysis is the type of art criticism that doesn't interpret artwork or gives remark about the value, but just focuses on formal elements an how they represent the subject and reveal content. </em>
It looks into the picture plan, composition, color, technique, content, material, plans, and similar elements, analyzing their arrangement, balance, and movement.
<u><em>Simultaneous Contrasts</em></u><u> by Sonia Delaunay is the abstract work of art belonging to the school of Orphism</u>, <u>which is evident upon formal analysis of the color, structure, and subjects of the painting.</u><u> </u>
<u>Orphism was the offshoot of Cubism that moved into the abstract direction.</u>
<u> That is how we can analyze what is the influence of the cubism on this particular piece. </u>
Pastels are chalk. It is dry pigment, mixed with a dry binder placed on a textured surface to hold the pigment to the paper. It doesn’t involve any liquid of any kind. Acrylics are a dry pigment, mixed with a liquid binder placed on pretty much any kind of surface that is properly prepared with gesso or some kind of acrylic medium. Water or liquid mediums are involved in the application of the paint. Acrylics cannot be put over top of pastels as the dry pigment doesn’t allow the acrylic paint to bind to the substrate. You can put pastel over top of acrylic ONLY if you use an acrylic ground medium specifically designed for pastels. It kind of feels like sandpaper after you apply it and it dries clear. You will have to put a fixative on the pastel if you are using it on a canvas substrate, and that is a whole other topic of discussion.
Answer:
G
Explanation:
Note that there are no given sharps or flats (which would be located next to the times).
The lowest line would be the e, followed by one dash which is c. The second dash would be a, and the note is situated right underneath the second dash, making it a G.
G is your answer.
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B.) Walters enjoyed international art.
<span>In 1897 his purchase of a 15th-century Koran, originally thought to be Persian, but now regarded as Indian, may have initiated the manuscript collection.
</span>Walters continued to augment his holdings, buying both in New York and abroad. He collected Egyptian, ancient Near Eastern, and Islamic art, as well as a number of key classical and western medieval<span> objects. </span>