Well done Shu Cao of the Oxford High School for girls for
producing this nice solution so promptly.
Consider any convex quadrilateral $Q$ made from four rigid rods
with flexible joints at the vertices so that the shape of $Q$ can
be changed while keeping the lengths of the sides constant. If
the diagonals of the quadrilateral cross at an angle $\theta$ in
the range $(0 \leq \theta < \pi/2)$, as we deform $Q$, the
angle $\theta$ and the lengths of the diagonals will change and
we have to prove that the area of of $Q$ is a constant multiple
of $\tan \theta $.
Notation: Let $|{\bf x}|$ mean the scalar quantity of vector
${\bf x}$ and the area of $Q$ be represented by $S$.
In the problem Diagonals for Area it was shown that the area of a
quadrilateral is given by half the product of the lengths of the
diagonals multiplied by the sine of the angle between the
diagonals: $$S = {\textstyle{1\over 2}}|{\bf d_1}| \times |{\bf
d_2}|\sin \theta.$$ From the definition of the scalar product
$$|{\bf d_1}| \times |{\bf d_2}| = {{\bf d_1}\cdot {\bf d_2}
\over \cos \theta }.$$ So $$S = {\textstyle{1\over 2}}{{\bf
d_1}\cdot {\bf d_2}\sin \theta \over \cos \theta } =
{\textstyle{1\over 2}}{\bf d_1}\cdot{\bf d_2}\tan \theta.$$ As
shown in the problem Flexi Quads, the scalar product of the
diagonals is constant i.e. $$2{\bf d}_1 \cdot{\bf d}_2 = {\bf
a}_2^2+{\bf a}_4^2-{\bf a}_1^2-{\bf a}_3^2.$$ As ${\bf a_1, a_2,
a_3, a_4}$, the lengths of the sides of the quadrilateral, all
remain constant, hence ${\bf d}_1 \cdot {\bf d}_2$ remains
constant. Hence the area of the quadrilateral $Q$ is a constant
multiple of $\tan \theta$ and so it is proportional to $\tan
\theta $.