Answer:
The third one
Explanation:
<em><u>Ambassadeurs </u></em><u>poster by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec is the one done in the lithography technique. </u>
Lithography is based on the immiscibility of oil and water. It is very suitable for free drawing and painting, as well as producing the work in many copies.<u> The print is applied to the smooth surface, allowing the artist to have complete freedom of movement and manner, and it is later reproduced on the paper or other material. </u>This makes it suitable for posters, like the example we see here.
The first artwork is part of Andy Warhol's <em>Endangered Species</em>, and while it can look at what we expect of lithography it is done in the s<u>creenprint technique.</u>
The second artwork is Dürer's <em>Rhinoceros</em>, done in a <u>woodcut</u>. While it does look like lithography because of its spectacular details and exquisite mastery, it is too early for this technique.<u> Dürer did this piece in 1515, while lithography was invented only in 1796.</u>
Fall and winter
Hope this helps
Until computers started to dominate science and technology in the early decades of the 20th century, virtually every measuring instrument was analog.
Many scientific instruments now measure things digitally (automatically showing readings on LCD displays) instead of using analog pointers and dials.
Hope this helps!!^^ plz mark brianliest?
No i believe it was a mix of elements to make it seem as one unit