If you were a photographer or a filmmaker, what pictures or videos will you show to make you country known around the world?
WHY?
Answers
Answer:
only this much i could do sorry
Explanation:
Visually speaking, we live in the iPhone age. The bulky and expensive Handycams of the 1980s (no longer quite so handy) have given way to smartphones, tablets and YouTube. If history is any guide, these innovations too will one day seem as quaint as eight-track tapes. But they are indisputable landmarks, representing a substantial shift in our relationship to picture making. iPhones and related technologies make it possible to make good quality video with ease. The day will come soon when shooting individual photographs will seem odd and unnecessary. As the quality of motion capture improves, we may stop taking still pictures altogether, shooting video instead and extracting stills, if we want them, in editing. If we used to “see” in photographs, will we then “see” in motion pictures?
Since the Lumière Brothers screened their first film Exiting the Lumière Factory in Lyon at the Grand Café on the Boulevard des Capucines, Paris, in 1895, motion pictures have held a special place in the public imagination. Photographers are among those who quickly absorbed their influence, and many of the major movements in cinema, from German Expressionism to the French New Wave, have had lasting effects on the practice of still photography. This is what might be termed, in photography terms, cinematic style. Renowned directors such as Fritz Lang, Sergei Eisenstein and Alfred Hitchcock, for example, had distinctive visual signatures, which have influenced generations of modern and contemporary artists. And there have always been those intrepid few, like Helmar Lerski, Paul Strand, and Robert Frank, who felt comfortable going back and forth between photography and film.
For two such closely entwined inventions, it is amazing how separate the histories of photography and cinema have been kept. They are usually presented as independent, self-contained disciplines
Answer:
Photography is helping them to really see and that is a wonderful thing. Taking photographs of things that make us smile is like taking time to write down things that we are grateful for. It has that same positive energy flow and I really believe it's good for our health, happiness and general wellbeing
Explanation:
Landscape.
Architectural.
Wildlife. .
Fine Art.
because they are on high demand and are available in south asia..
thank uh brainliest