1. , hard (stone),beautiful (physical description)
2. a woman from the British museum.
3. a woman thinking the artist must have been thinking an ordinary design and this is the result.
4. this statue is very detailed the hair almost looks real ( as far as you can get with stone) besides the discolor the proportions are realistic. overall a very good statue.
Depending on where you are brought up, and the difference in society, you will see different things and people will have different beliefs in symbolism. For example, seeing a bird in a picture for a Christian may represent a dove and be seen as peace, but for someone else it may be seen as a vulture and represent death
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.
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If you've spent any time reading about photography, you've probably come how SLRs work if you've ever picked one up, but here's a refresher. Light enters through the lens, and the camera's mirror system reflects it into your eye. The earliest rangefinder cameras required the photographer to focus My name is Matt Solomon , I am a photographer in Melbourne. is shot digitally and my Australia Landscape photography that I shoot on film exclusively. Dorfman stocked up with a year's supply of her camera's last available 20 x 24 instant film.
Go get a film camera, whether it be rangefinder or 35mm, it's up to you, and go make actual art. If you can see the photo immediately after taking it then you may as
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