Предмет: Другие предметы, автор: 006batir

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Автор ответа: afruzap7h2jb
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волк тигр медведь лиса и собака конь олень лось корова кошка верблюд баран
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Предмет: Английский язык, автор: lerak8340
b Read the article again. Mark the sentences T (true) or
F (false).
1 The journalist saw tourists taking photographs of works of art in Rome and New York.
2 When he first saw people taking photos in the MOMA, he didn't understand what they were really doing.
3 Then he realized that the photographers were not looking at the paintings.
4 They were taking photos because they wanted to look at the paintings later.
5 Later a couple asked him to take a photo of them in front of a painting.
6 He suggests two possible ways of solving the problem.
The first time I noticed this phenomenon was a few years
ago, in St. Peter's Basilica in Rome - a crowd of people
standing around Michelangelo's Pieta, taking photos with
their cameras and cell phones. Then last week I saw it again
at the Museum of Modern Art {the MOMA) in New York City.
At first, I wasn't too worried when I saw people photographing
the paintings. It was a little irritating, but that was all. It didn't
make me angry. Then the sad truth hit me. Most of the people
were taking photos without looking at the paintings themselves.
People were pushing me, not because they were trying to get
a better view of the art, but because they wanted to make sure
that no one blocked their photo. Was it possible that maybe they
were taking the photos so that they could admire the paintings
better when they got home? This was very improbable. They
were not there to see the paintings, but to take photos to prove
that they had been there.
Then it got worse. Now people were taking photos of their
partners or friends who were posing next to. or in front of some
of the most famous paintings. Neither the photographers nor
the person they were photographing had looked at the art itself,
although I saw that sometimes they read the label, to make sure
that the artist really was famous. At least nobody asked me to
take a picture of them together, smiling in front of a Picasso!
I think that photography in museums should be banned, but I
also have a less drastic solution. I think that people who want to
take a photo of an exhibit should be forced to look at it first, for
at least one minute.