Well art is a way to express your self so if people are critiques about it then they may not understand it. So if I were in there shoes I'd feel kinda wouldn't care because it's my artwork about my emotions :) hope I helped ya
Answer:
They used this technique in oder to create the good guys and the bad guys. The light good (The good person) the dark the bad (the protaganist) It was used frequently in films to display and help the audience catch on in films or plays
Explanation:
Answer:
<em> would go with B and C </em>
Explanation:
because I always try to keep everything proportionate and balanced when painting. I also use harmony to keep things in order also but if your really having problems with painting and doubting yourself when it comes to stuff like this you shouldn't stress out about it because sooner or later away of painting will come to you and you won't be having to ask people like me for help. don't know how this helped but hope it did.
Answer is A - airbrushing
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.
Explanation: