Yavrouian_Function of ArtProf. Hope UmanskyJohn YavrouianBrandman UniversityWEEK 2 ASSIGNMENT - FUNCTION OF ART 1Yavrouian_Function of ArtIntroductionAddressing our topic, functions of art normally fall within three categories. These are personal, social or physical functions. There are many factors and categories should be considered any given piece of art identifying the artist. The physical functions of art are most easily dealt with. Works of art that are created to perform some service have physical functions. The personal functions of art are the most difficult to explain in any great detail. There are many of them, and they vary from person to person. An artist may create out of a need for self-expression, or gratification. He might have wanted to communicate a thought or point to the viewer. Perhaps that artist was trying to provide an aesthetic experience, both for artistic ability and viewer's appreciation. Identifying the artist, what this artist was thinking at the time he created this film, where does this pieces of art intend to show, how did affect everyone, when did it happened, it is in our story.In the same way, the nature function of art, an illustration of my love for beach, the waves, the ocean, the rivers flowing, all the surrounding like an art are giving me constant love and emotions to live. Beautiful beach is stretching on a narrow and gently sloping strip of land that lies along the edge of an ocean. Materials such as sand, pebbles, rocks, and seashell fragments cover beaches. Most beach materials are the products of weathering and erosion. Over many years, water and wind wear away at the land. The continual action of waves beating against a rocky cliff, for example, may cause some rocks to come loose. Huge boulders can be worn down to tiny grains of sand. Beach materials may travel long distances, carried by wind and waves. As the tide comes in, for example, it deposits ocean sediment. This sediment may contain sand, shells, seaweed, and even marine organisms like crabs or sea anemones. When the tide goes out, it takes some sediment with it. Tides and ocean currents can carry sediment a few meters or hundreds of kilometers away. Tides and currents are the main way beaches are created, changed, and even destroyed, as the currents move sediment and debris from one place to another. Beaches are constantly changing. Tides and weather can alter beaches every day, bringing new materials and taking away others. Beaches also change seasonally. During the winter, storm winds toss sand into the air. This can sometimes erode beaches and create sandbars. Sandbars are narrow, exposed areas of sand and sediment just off the beach. During the summer, waves retrieve sand from sandbars and build the beach back up again. These seasonal changes cause beaches to be wider and have a gentle slope in the summer, and be narrower and steeper in the winter.In other words, I would like to have the opportunity to explain how art and the use of...