Artists make shapes in the background smaller than shapes in the foreground to communicate their distance from the viewer. How else might a landscape artist show shapes in the background to depict their distance from the viewer?

A. Show shapes with bright colors.
B. Show shapes that are sharp and clear.
C. Show shapes with lighter colors.
D. Show shapes that are large and bold.
Is the answer C?
Thank you

1. C

2. b
3. d
4. a
5. d
6. c
7. a
8. c
9. c
10. b
100% correct

^_^ ^0^ ^~^

@aydn is lying those answers are 100% correct!

Yes

Ice cream lover <3 is right 100

I always thought it was D, woops

Ice Cream Lover, i will give you all the ice cream available. You turned my C into an A-.

(Yes, I'm aware I'm severely late.)

Also, can we all acknowledge how useful Writeacher was for Dawn's question?

.........look at this....im even later than you

Yes, the correct answer is C. A landscape artist can show shapes in the background with lighter colors to depict their distance from the viewer. When objects are far away, they tend to appear less saturated and lighter in color due to atmospheric perspective. This is because the atmosphere scatters and absorbs light, making distant objects appear less distinct and lighter in value. By using lighter colors for shapes in the background, the artist can create the illusion of depth and enhance the sense of distance.

yall are lying so hard i got a zero :(((((((((((((((((((((((((((