Answer:
In relief printing, the artist draws a design on a smooth block of material—usually wood or linoleum—and uses tools to carefully cut away the areas that are not to be printed, leaving behind a raised surface of lines and shapes.
Answer:
Explanation:
Each year, a garland of more than 400 red roses is sewn into a green satin backing with the seal of the Commonwealth on one end and the Twin Spires and number of the race's current renewal on the other. Each garland is also adorned with a "crown" of roses, green fern and ribbon. The "crown," a single rose pointing upward in the center of the garland, symbolizes the struggle and heart necessary to reach the Derby Winner's Circle.
The Kroger Company has been crafting the garland for the Kentucky Derby since 1987. After taking over the duties from the Kingsley Walker florist, Kroger began constructing the prestigious garland in one of its local stores for the public to view on Derby Eve.
His art is characterized by outlined or drawn imagery.
Achilles Painter, Athenian vase painter identified by and named for an amphora credited to him with a portrait of Achilles and Briseis. The amphora is now in the Rome Museums. His period of action corresponds with the Parthenon statues and with the government of Pericles. The Achilles Painter also is honored for his white-ground lekythos. The white-ground lekythoi are assumed to be the most trustworthy reference of data about great Greek paintings of the Roman period.
I forgot what it’s called but the ones with the bullet that he can control with the gun