Answer:
Communication is a process through which individuals exchange information with each other, through messages encoded in channels of mutual understanding called languages. Through communication, individuals interact with each other, fulfilling their social needs as human beings, at the same time that they acquire knowledge and use the message sent or received to obtain a benefit. In this way, humans need communication as an essential tool for interpersonal interaction that allows us to develop optimally as individuals.
 
        
             
        
        
        
During the Paleolithic Age, hominins grouped in small societies such as bands and subsisted by gathering plants, fishing, and hunting or scavenging wild animals. The Paleolithic Age is characterized by the use of knapped stone tools, although at the time humans also used wood and bone tools.
 
        
             
        
        
        
The 2018 publication of a book "<u>The Mediatization of the Artist</u>" written by various writers included a chapter titled "In Bed with Marina Abramovi: Mediatizing Women's Art as Personal Drama" written by Marcel Bleuler.
The recent methods used to mediate popular performance artist Marina Abramovic and the stories built up around her work of arts are covered in this chapter of Bleuler's book. The author argues that Abramovic uses the narrative as part of her image strategy and analyzes paradigmatic projections of a romantic need onto female artists, primarily in film.
Marina Abramovic's famous live performance art during 2010 attracted nearly a million visitors to the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA). While Abramovic attempted to rationalize this hysteria by demonstrating the psycho-neurological significance of her "art" through scientific means, Marcel Bleuler contended that the hysteria stemmed from a rhetoric about the performance that was too profound and that spread over time and through various media, following a common pattern in the mediatization of female artists: the ambiguous attention as a remedy for an unmet need to be appreciated.
<em>Image: "Marina Abramović during her "The Artist Is Present" show at the Museum of Modern Art</em>
Learn more about Marina Abramovic: brainly.com/question/10593223
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1. Colour is the visual property of the pigment of an object that is detected by the eye and produced as a result of the way the object reflects or emits light. The human eye is capable of seeing millions of colours, making it one of the most diverse and powerful elements of art.
Each color has three properties—hue, value, and intensity. Hue is the name of a colour. Value is a colour’s lightness or darkness, which is altered when black or white is added. Intensity refers to the intensity of a colour, often measured by boldness or dullness.
Example of complementary colours in art, Hiroshige uses red and green to create contrast.
2. LINE
Line is an element of art defined as the path of a point moving through space. There are many types of line in art. Lines may be continuous or broken, and can be any width or texture. The great variety of line types make them an especially useful tool in artworks.
Example of gesture lines in art, Marino Marini uses big swooshing gesture lines that capture the action and energy of the subject.
3. SHAPE
A shape is an enclosed area of space created through lines or other elements of the composition.
Example of geometric shapes in art, Picasso uses circles, triangles, crescents, and rectangles.