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grandymaker [24]
3 years ago
5

Which art element refers to areas with only 2 dimensions such as squares and circles?

Arts
2 answers:
kodGreya [7K]3 years ago
8 0
Yes above answer is correct choice to the question in my opinion
nydimaria [60]3 years ago
7 0

Answer:

A shape is defined as an enclosed area in two dimensions. By definition shapes are always flat, but the combination of shapes, color, and other means can make shapes appear three-dimensional, as forms.

<h2><em><u>Hope this helps..</u></em></h2>
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When thinking about how the rhythm section is set up in the band, how does that affect their ability to play together? pls hurry
Nutka1998 [239]

If an artist has just given the best, most effortless and inspired performance of their life, they’re not going to want to change much when the next gig rolls around. Few things will keep musicians working more consistently than the ability to support and flatter a vocalist or soloist — particularly if they’re a joy for the rest of the group to play with!

The players who develop this lucrative reputation tend, as a rule, to share a common set of priorities: Play for the song, support the lead, and allow space for your fellow musicians to work. The development of these instincts is more elusive than you might expect, but you’ll find that one central concept underpins everything: attentive listening!

Avoid the Pitfall of Self-Absorption

It’s probably self-evident, but playing supportively requires paying attention to what you’re accompanying. Less experienced players often get so wrapped up in playing their parts that they stop listening to the lead (not to mention the other players). Even experienced players can fall victim to tunnel vision, particularly if they’ve been asked to replicate a complex or repetitive part from a recording.

We can guard against this by periodically checking in with ourselves to make sure we’re hearing not only every word of the vocal but also every note our bandmates are playing.

If the leader or musical director stops the band for any reason in rehearsal, ask yourself, “Can I sing the last phrase the bassist played?” or, “Was the drummer on hi-hat or ride cymbal in that section?” Details like these can inform every decision you make, so it’s essential to stay engaged.

Awareness of your surroundings helps you choose the absolute perfect thing to play at any given moment (not to mention being able to quickly diagnose problems when things aren’t gelling).

Study the Masters

Refine your skills by going to the source. Listen intently to as many recordings from great rhythm sections as possible, including (but certainly not limited to):

Any number of New York-based ad-hoc session groups without catchy names

When you find a record of a masterful rhythm track, listen through five or six times. First, hear how the whole section works together, then focus on each band member’s part on successive passes — once to hone in on bass, once to listen in detail to drums, etc. — before giving a more informed listen to the entire arrangement again.

Pay attention to how the musicians play interrelated parts, and to what each musician adds. What is each player’s role? Does the time feel mechanical? Loose? Danceable? Impressionistic? What makes it that way? How does each musician advance that overall aesthetic?

Continual study of the great rhythm sections, along with experience in the trenches, will help develop your ever-important group playing instincts. Know What You’re Working With To help an artist sell a piece emotionally, it pays to really know the song. Although I’m a fluent sight-reader, I like to memorize music I’m performing whenever possible, even for one-offs. This allows me to keep my attention (and eyes) off the page and on the artist and my bandmates. It gives me a chance to check out the lyrics thoroughly in order to make sure I’m helping the artist convey an appropriate emotion (rather than just playing correct notes in time). What’s more, I personally find that music stands can be a detriment to stage presence; an almost literal barrier between me and the audience. Even if a chart is necessary due to time constraints, make sure to know enough about the song to be able to set up section changes effectively and with appropriate dynamics. Play Collaboratively There are many traditions of rhythm-section playing, each with its own conventions, but we can nevertheless make a few generalizations about group function. Most importantly, make sure that what you’re playing is helping the music. If it’s not, or if you’re not sure, then there’s a good chance it’s doing the opposite! Whatever you play, do so with purpose and with an idea of how it relates to the rest of the parts. Find something to add that serves a need within the music. Aspire to do more than merely fill space. A common pitfall among less experienced players is to simply latch onto and mimic a part another band member is already playing. Sometimes unison or double parts are effective, but there’s a big difference between intentional artistic choice and unimaginative arranging.

4 0
3 years ago
Which of the following graphic design movements was highly influenced by traditional Japanese art and had borders marked by styl
kozerog [31]

Answer:

art nouveau.

Explanation:

BRITANNICA

Art Nouveau

ARTISTIC STYLE

WRITTEN BY: The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica

See Article History

Alternative Titles: Modernismo, Modernista, Sezessionstil, Stile Floreale, Stile Liberty

Art Nouveau, ornamental style of art that flourished between about 1890 and 1910 throughout Europe and the United States. Art Nouveau is characterized by its use of a long, sinuous, organic line and was employed most often in architecture, interior design, jewelry and glass design, posters, and illustration. It was a deliberate attempt to create a new style, free of the imitative historicism that dominated much of 19th-century art and design. About this time the term Art Nouveau was coined, in Belgium by the periodical L’Art Moderne to describe the work of the artist group Les Vingt and in Paris by S. Bing, who named his gallery L’Art Nouveau. The style was called Jugendstil in Germany, Sezessionstil in Austria, Stile Floreale (or Stile Liberty) in Italy, and Modernismo (or Modernista) in Spain.

staircase in the Hôtel Tassel

staircase in the Hôtel Tassel

Staircase in the Hôtel Tassel, Brussels, designed by Victor Horta in the Art Nouveau style, 1892–93.

Ch..Bastin / J.Evrard/DeA Picture Library

Art Nouveau

QUICK FACTS

DATE

c. 1890 - c. 1910

RELATED ARTISTS

Louis Sullivan

Antoni Gaudí

Valentin Aleksandrovich Serov

Lyubov Sergeyevna Popova

Louis Comfort Tiffany

Émile Gallé

Aubrey Beardsley

Max Beckmann

Yelena Genrikhovna Guro

Walter Crane

In England the style’s immediate precursors were the Aestheticism of the illustrator Aubrey Beardsley, who depended heavily on the expressive quality of organic line, and the Arts and Crafts movement of William Morris, who established the importance of a vital style in the applied arts. On the European continent, Art Nouveau was influenced by experiments with expressive line by the painters Paul Gauguin and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec. The movement was also partly inspired by a vogue for the linear patterns of Japanese prints (ukiyo-e).

Beardsley, Aubrey: illustration for Le Morte Darthur

Beardsley, Aubrey: illustration for Le Morte Darthur

Art Nouveau illustration by Aubrey Beardsley for an 1893 edition of Sir Thomas Malory's Le Morte Darthur.

Ann Ronan Picture Library/Heritage-Images

Kedleston Hall

READ MORE ON THIS TOPIC

Western architecture: Art Nouveau

Although known as Jugendstil in Germany, Sezessionstil in Austria, Modernista in Spain, and Stile Liberty…

The distinguishing ornamental characteristic of Art Nouveau is its undulating asymmetrical line, often taking the form of flower stalks and buds, vine tendrils, insect wings, and other delicate and sinuous natural objects; the line may be elegant and graceful or infused with a powerfully rhythmic and whiplike force. In the graphic arts the line subordinates all other pictorial elements—form, texture, space, and colour—to its own decorative effect. In architecture and the other plastic arts, the whole of the three-dimensional form becomes engulfed in the organic, linear rhythm, creating a fusion between structure and ornament. Architecture particularly shows this synthesis of ornament and structure; a liberal combination of materials—ironwork, glass, ceramic, and brickwork—was employed, for example, in the creation of unified interiors in which columns and beams became thick vines with spreading tendrils and windows became both openings for light and air and membranous outgrowths of the organic whole. This approach was directly opposed to the traditional architectural values of reason and clarity of structure.

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3 years ago
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Llana [10]

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C. Do an online search for local flower growers.

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3 years ago
Prior to showing audiovisual materials, introduce the content and clarify the objective of the method. In other words, the healt
zheka24 [161]

Answer:

The objective of the audiovisual media is through the didactic process, to optimize student learning.

Also develop the student's interest in the topic to be treated and  use the new technologies.

The purpose of this type of materials is to capture from another perspective  the interest of the students.

Explanation:

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4 years ago
Who are the 3 artists discussed in the video?
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We can’t see the video that you are referring to
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