Thick texture because texture has nothing to do with music
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Answer:
Understanding shapes can help with creating realistic drawings because shapes help us identify the shape of stuff we see in real life.
3D shapes help people make realistic poses whether its for people or objects
Explanation:
The answer is option D - an object as it truly appears, without necessarily providing emotion or an experience
Hope this helps!! :)
Answer:
because of modern cinemas
Explanation:
At this edge of the early 21st century, we would call this a traditional theatre experience. It is familiar, not one of those experimental, avant garde productions. It’s what we expect from our theater. Hasn’t it always been like this?
It hasn’t. This experience that we call theater is still relatively new. It is only about a hundred years old. Shakespeare would cry “foul and most unnatural murder” if he were to see it. Or, at the least find this new theater a novelty unlike what he did. Sophocles, Moliere and all of the great actors of the 19th century would have the same response. The theatre we call traditional is wildly divergent from what came before.
It could be said that theatre changed to reflect it’s time. It became a more realistic and psychologically connected experience. And yet, we lost some vital aspects of theatre in the translation. I believe for theatre to meet the requirements of expressing what it is to live in the 21st Century and to remain vital, we need to go back and reclaim some of what made theatre theatre before the turn of the last century. [Read the post on The Rise of Realism]
Every time theatre has remade itself, it has begun by looking back at what came before. The early seed of the shift to realistic theatre began with a look back at Shakespearean production practices. The rise of the regional theatre movement in this country took a look back.
Let’s compare the production of Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar in the newly opened Globe Theater (1600) and the recent production of Tracy Letts' Pulitzer Prize winning play August: Osage County, (2008)[i]