Jan Myers creates movement in her quilts through repetition and alternation of colors. Only after looking closely do we see that, like the keys on a piano, every square in the quilt moves up a note in value. Laid over the diagonal "cylinders" of graduated color is a beige grid that appears lighter or darker, depending on the colors behind it. Our eye races across this quilt, up and down and over the rolling cylinders.
Elements and principles... it’s arranged with media to create a feeling of wholeness .
Answer:
helloo!!
Explanation:
well the answer is b) Jenne art.
Mali’s first ruler was Sundiata. The oral history of the griots says Sundiata was a sickly child who had trouble walking. Exercise and hard work made him strong. He became a great military leader. By 1250, he had led the Mandinka people against their enemies, won control of the gold trade routes, and founded the empire of Mali. Some of the soldiers in his army might have looked like the horseman in this Malian sculpture from the 1300s.
Answer:
I think the art movement?
Answer:
The Orders
Really hopes this helps!!!! Good luck!
Explanation:
The three main types of columns used in Greek temples and other public buildings are Doric, Ionic, and Corinthian. The truest and most basic difference among the orders has to do with proportions (Doric columns, for example, being thicker and shorter, Ionic columns taller and slimmer). As a shortcut, the orders may be distinguished most easily by their capitals (the tops of the columns). As you can see from the following examples, the Doric capital has the simplest design; the Ionic has the curlicues called volutes, and the Corinthian has the acanthus leaves
Doric is not only a type of column, but an "order"; this means that temples of the Doric order not only have this type of column, but also have a certain structure at the upper levels. The different types of orders (column plus entablature) are illustrated by these diagrams, from Perseus: Doric order, and Ionic order. The Doric order is characterized by the series of triglyphs and metopes on the entablature. Each metope was occupied by a panel of relief sculpture.
The Parthenon combines elements of the Doric and Ionic orders. Basically a Doric peripteral temple, it features a continuous sculpted frieze borrowed from the Ionic order, as well as four Ionic columns supporting the roof of the opisthodomos.