Srry I want to answer but I’m in fourth grade so yas
Photography had a profound impact on history because it was a way to take an authentic visual testimony about vital social issues that history talks about. What history talks about, photography shows. It is one thing to write about wars, for example, and it's a totally different thing to take a photo of the battlefield and allow thousands of people to really see what is happening there. The social documentary photography is always socially engaged. One of the earliest and most notable examples is Jacob Riis' "How the Other Half Lives: Studies among the Tenements of New York"<span> (1890). It was a publication that documented the lives of New York's poorest social class - immigrant workers. Another example would be the famous, Pulitzer-winning photo "Napalm Girl" taken by Nick Ut, in the Vietnam war. Hundreds of pages of text wouldn't have been able to capture the destructive force of war in such a compelling way as this photo did.</span>
Although the building was to undergo a number of changes, it remained largely intact until the seventeenth century. The early Christians turned the temple into a church, adding an apse at the east end. It was probably at this time that the sculptures representing the birth of Athena were removed from the centre of the east pediment and many of the metopes were defaced. The Parthenon served as a church until Athens was conquered by the Ottoman Turks in the fifteenth century, when it became a mosque. In 1687, during the Venetian siege of the Acropolis, the defending Turks were using the Parthenon as a store for gunpowder, which was ignited by the Venetian bombardment. The explosion blew out the heart of the building, destroying the roof and parts of the walls and the colonnade.
The Venetians succeeded in capturing the Acropolis, but held it for less than a year. Further damage was done in an attempt to remove sculptures from the west pediment, when the lifting tackle broke and the sculptures fell and were smashed. Many of the sculptures that were destroyed in 1687, are now known only from drawings made in 1674, by an artist probably to be identified as Jacques Carrey.
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Hi I did realize that some people are having trouble with this question so here is something you can use for your answer towards the question.
Word of advice if you wanna use this it would be best to reword some things. I did write this but reword some things so teachers won't assume/say it's plagiarism.
The art category for this image is cave art. This art was back in the stone age when men where doing drawings of the animals they saw. The french archaeologist Henri Breuil did this drawing in 1915 to show the environment and the life of art for men of the stone age. This drawing was published by the American paleontologist Henry Fairfield Osbom.
Hope this helps.
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b, red is known as an evil color
hope this helps <3