Answer: Halftones are a part of drawing and thus they remain even when the color is removed
Explanation: image down
Answer: c. Ringo Starr.
Explanation:
<em>Shining Time Station</em> is a children's drama television series created by Britt Allcroft and Rick Siggelkow. The series included sequences from the show <em>Tomas & Friends</em>, very popular in the United Kingdom. The series starred Ringo Starr, Didi Conn, George Carlin, Brian O'Connor, and The Flexitoon Puppets. Ringo Starr had already done a voice-over of the storyteller for Thomas & Friends, and was a perfect choice for the character <em>Mr. Conductor</em> in Shining Time Station.
Explanation:
Vincent van Gogh (Dutch, 1853-1890), The Poplars at Saint-Rémy, 1889. Oil on fabric, 24¼ x 17 15/16 in. The Cleveland Museum of Art; Bequest of Leonard C. Hanna, Jr., 1958.32
A recent trip to south Florida occasioned what has become a routine sojourn for me, a stopover at the Norton Museum of Art.
At the Norton, van Gogh’s The Poplars at Saint-Rémy is overwhelmed twice, first by its ornate antique frame, then by its installation on the third floor. Softly lit, it inhabits its own grey-painted gallery, a pearl in an oversized jewel box. It doesn’t help that the landscape’s colors are relatively sedate for a late van Gogh, relying on white to suggest terrain bleached by sunlight. The central two poplars are enclosed within a diamond-shaped design circumscribed by skyline above and crossing diagonals of rock-strewn land below. It is an inherently unstable composition, harmonized by color, the blue sky repeated in ground plane shadows and the blanched earth tones picked up in clouds. There is perhaps no way to write about van Gogh’s brushwork, idiosyncratic and instantly recognizable, without resorting to banalities; suffice to say that his sense of urgency demanded an entirely novel handling of paint. The Poplars at Saint-Rémy was made in a single session, a feat of compressed intensity.
Sharing a gallery with two other works by the artist, Degas’s Portrait of Mlle. Hortense Valpinçon resides more comfortably in its ground floor setting. The story of its production is no less remarkable than that of the van Gogh; leaving Paris during the barricades of 1871, Degas arrived at the Valpinçon country home without a canvas, and apprehended some mattress ticking upon which to paint his friend’s nine-year-old daughter. She leans into a sideboard and surveys us with unusual self-possession for one so young, holding in her right hand what has been variously described as a slice of fruit or a coin.
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<u>Barriers to creative thinking:</u>
- Blocks to creative abilities are a common happening which almost everyone pass through.
- Creative abilities are simply a thought of good ideas, something outside the blocks.
- There are many barriers to such creative thinking. First and the foremost is formal education.
- You heard that right, formal education works on the concept of ‘only one correct answer.’ That’s simply a hurdle to one’s creative thinking.
- What if the other answer is more appropriate than the former one which is being taught on since decades.
- Apart from this, following rules is something which doesn’t allow a person to think beyond normal/average thinking.