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a central building surrounded by religious and governmental buildings
Stylistically, the British artist David Hockney has been described as having roots in pop art, using highly graphic style referential to that of advertising. Linearly his mark-making is quite clean and sharp; examples of line type are contour lines and cross contour lines, which may come in the form of vertical, horizontal, curved, zigzag; Hockney uses throughout his art an array of these lines to create different effects.
The only way to create black by mixing colors is to combine the primary colors together. To do this with two colors, one may use one of three combinations, hues of yellow and purple, hues of orange and blue or hues of green and red.
Throughout its thousand-year history, the term has been applied almost exclusively to the windows of churches, mosques, and other significant buildings.
Stained glass is still made the same way it was back in the Middle Ages and comes in various forms. For the glass used in leaded glass windows, a lump of the molten glass is caught up at one end of a blow pipe, blown into a cylinder, cut, flattened and cooled.