Answer:
Ann Hurst has lived and painted in Lions Bay since 1980 and is still amazed by the stunning and ever-changing array of scenescapes all around….Whistler, Howe Sound, North Shore and Vancouver…. that provide the inspirations to capture the moment.
Ann studied with Frances Landsberg at Studio-by-the-Sea, in West Vancouver, whose mentoring brought out the best of her natural impressionist talents. She was guest-artist in the BC Pavilion at Expo 86, and over the years a featured artist at many art shows and galleries in the area, including her own First Street Gallery. Her art has been featured on Lions Bay annual banners on several occasions, and has been donated to many worthy causes. Five art card series of 6 cards each: Blackcomb, Whistler, Sea to Sky and Vancouver 1&2 have been very popular gifts, still available today.
Ann is admired widely for capturing both the impression and the emotion of a scene in luminous watercolours and rich, bold oils. Her paintings are loved in homes all across Canada and in the USA, UK, Italy, and elsewhere.
Today, her Lions Bay home is her gallery, open by appointment.
Explanation:
Not sure about the 1st one, but it sounds like a cruel irony, or karma, where one does something bad, and later on the same bad thing gets done to you. Breaking the fourth wall is when a character in a comic, book, or tv show/movie talks to the reader, or states that he knows that there is an audience and he is just a character (comes from the old tv sets where there were only 3 walls, and the fourth wall was where the audience would watch in, and cameras would shoot: so when they "broke the fourth wall", they looked out at the audience and talked to them). Externalised conscience is essentially, as far as i know, when a character decides between what he wants to do and what he should do, and there are usually many soliliquies (excuse the spelling) while he makes the decision. Not sure if this is all 100% correct, but that's what my non-drama knowledge allows me, and hope it helps you out a little bit.
Answer:
True
Explanation:
because perspective have three sides and they converge at a vanishing point
What do you think or what you know about the audiovisual subject
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