Answer:
The image is of a side profile of a woman's head, mounted on a cubed-base. She appears to be leaning, or perhaps falling. Although the woman is obviously plastic, the apathy and surrender in her face is supported by the statement, which written vertically down the left-hand side of the picture. The eye natural goes to the woman's eye, and then tends to drift up towards the word and the top and then down the statement, which gives the piece balance along with the use of shades and shadows creating unity.
Explanation:
Answer:
C. Report the symptom to the health department and ask his manager if he can clean floors and windows.
Explanation:
If a food worker experiences a migraine but then feels better just before his shift, he should report the symptom to the health department and ask his manager if he can clean floors and windows. This worker shouldn't manipulate any food because of his migraine, this symptom could be an indicator of some kind of sickness. That is why, if he is feeling better, he shouldn't skip work, but he should ask for a task that doesn't necessarily envolve touching food that another person could eat later and get infected.
It's probably important to have realistic interpretation because then the artist's audience can actually relate to it. The role of the artist has change ( if any) may have been the fact that now not only do they speak for themselves, their art now expresses other people's feelings too that can not express on their own.
Answer:
There is facet phase of Cubism, the analytic phase of Cubism, and the synthetic phase of Cubism.
Explanation:
Edg Confirmed It. Yw.
This piece is abstract. It is unknown to the eye what exactly it is looking at without an explanation. To many at first glance, this piece may look like a collect paint that has been stroked and blobbed, without careful planning or though, across a canvas. Therefore, there is not a clear subject matter, and no universal decision could be made. There is however content. When you look a this piece is does create feelings, however they may be different for each person who views the piece and for the artist himself.