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>
Answer:
d. Maderno’s plan
Explanation:
This is the final plan of the St. Peter’s Basilica, the plan of Carlo Maderno, who continued the plans of Michelangelo's plans by adding a nave and a narthex.
<u>Bramante's plan</u> was basically a square, roughly representing the top half of the image provided in the question.
It was modified by <u>Michelangelo </u>who added a section, then extended once more by Maderno who gave it this aspect.
The basilica was finished in 1626, 120 years after the construction began.
Answer with Explanation:
You have not included the image so I have done quick google search and I am putting the image that matched with the same worded question I found.
The question is (hopefully) about the Image "Morning View of Nihonbashi" by Utagawa Hiroshige.
As with any art, some aspects of the answer are subjective and will vary from observer to observer. First let's discuss about some details related to the scene. This is an Asian artwork, particularly a Japanese ukiyo-e scene. The scene can be interpreted as two groups of men, walking in two rows, moving goods across a bridge. One group is carrying some sort of cargo in boxes while the other group is carrying baskets of food. Some houses can also be seen in the background. The sky colour depicts a sunset with reddish-yellow tones.
Speaking of tones, orange, blue, and yellow are the primary colors used. The artist has used thin lines throughout the scene. Fairly simple geometric shapes are used. The scene is enclosed by the use of a gate or fence.
This is a typical example of a woodblock print, also called a woodcut, it was a technique used widely throughout East Asia. The corners of the woodblock were used as the registration points.
Colors that lie next to one another on the color wheel and share qualities of hue as a result of the mixture of adjacent hues, harmonious hues.
"<span>In visual perception, a color is almost never seen as it really is — as it physically is. This fact makes color the most relative medium in art."-John Cage </span>