A fragmented figure is like a puzzle piece from a bigger picture, you can see part of someone or something, but not all of it.
Imagine you're looking at a toy box full of blocks. Each block is a fragmented landscape, like a small part of a big drawing. If you put them together, they might make a whole scene with mountains, trees, and a house, but on their own, each one shows just a piece of that world.
Like Pieces of a Drawing
If you have a picture of a forest, and someone cuts it into pieces, like slices of cake, each slice is a fragmented figure. You can see part of the trees or maybe a bird flying in the sky, but not everything.
Putting It All Together
When you put all those puzzle pieces together, they make one complete picture, just like when you fit all your blocks into one big shape. That’s how fragmented figures and landscapes work: little parts that come together to make something bigger and more fun! A fragmented figure is like a puzzle piece from a bigger picture, you can see part of someone or something, but not all of it.
Imagine you're looking at a toy box full of blocks. Each block is a fragmented landscape, like a small part of a big drawing. If you put them together, they might make a whole scene with mountains, trees, and a house, but on their own, each one shows just a piece of that world.
Putting It All Together
When you put all those puzzle pieces together, they make one complete picture, just like when you fit all your blocks into one big shape. That’s how fragmented figures and landscapes work: little parts that come together to make something bigger and more fun!
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