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A Neanderthal man is believed to have painted a nose on a pebble using red pigment more than 43,000 years ago.
Archaeologists discovered a human fingerprint left on a rock in Spain now considered the oldest known human fingerprint.
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ScienceAlert on MSNThis May Be The World's Oldest Human Fingerprint, And That's Not AllAround 43,000 years ago, a Neanderthal dipped their finger in ocher and stamped the very center of a pebble. This one small ...
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Esquire Philippines on MSNMake Room for Prints: The Changing Landscape of Philippine PrintmakingA month-long printmaking festival at Gravity Art Space serves not as a definitive survey, but as a working cross-section of ...
Scientists say they found one of the oldest known symbolic objects bearing a human fingerprint in Europe. The print hints at ...
Georg Ireland uses Rebelle, a realistic painting software, to honor traditional craftsmanship while embracing the ...
There’s a glow emanating from the windows of Georgia Institute of Technology’s Hinman Research Building, and it’s cast by a ...
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The Punch on MSNAnimals in human skinSituated in a dark groove is a drum never to be beaten. Thin as a strand of hair, the delicate drum transmits sound waves. This drum does not speak; it ...
Here are five recent headlines putting Black art in the spotlight, from 17th-century sitters to masters of Nigerian Modernism ...
Nigerian visual artist Ademola Adeshina celebrated Africa Day, inaugurating a duo art exhibition titled 'Borderless Borders' on Sunday, May 25 at his Simple Living Art Gallery in Kibagabaga, Kigali.
From the UNC Charlotte Botanical Garden to inside a tea shop, there’s lots of art to be found — if you know where to look.
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