Not sure if it matters because I always see the tenses interchanged, e.g:
Shakespeare uses alliteration....
Alliteration is used by Shakespeare....
Idk if this helps, but usually I find its when I'm further explaining a topic, or adding additional techniques/analyse on a quote that I tend to do "furthermore, alliteration is used by Shakespeare to (blah)", but I start off by "Shakespeare uses alliteration to (blah)"
TBH I never paid attention to my tense until now (and this is coming 8ish months after I did it), I don't think it matters too much, just as long as you've got a coherent paragraph that stays true to sexy/petal/teal etc. Active voice/present tense all the time seems too "telly/shouty", passive voice/past tense all the time seems too "boring". I probably tend to do present tense when I'm trying to hone down a point.