green plant on white ceramic plate
https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1598370428633-2f92b0efd0a8?fm=jpg&fit=crop&w=600&q=80&fit=max
Organization Fighting Hunger Protests Banana Sale Outside Sotheby's | Artnet News
A nonprofit advocating for measures to stop hunger launched an ad campaign targeting the $6.
https://t.co/hQJ8TN7S9zHow Food and Life Intersected in Daniel Spoerri's Art | Artnet News
The acclaimed Swiss visual artist and writer Daniel Spoerri died on November 6 at the age of 94.
https://t.co/FvEqnpyxYia stream running through a lush green forest
https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1682235285927-98251bfe40a3?fm=jpg&fit=crop&w=600&q=80&fit=max
Asking other people questions — about their lives, their interests, their passions — is a surefire way to get brownie points in their friendship books. People are egocentric — they love to talk about themselves.
If you’re asking questions and getting people to talk about themselves, they’ll leave the conversation thinking you’re the coolest. Even if the conversation didn’t really give the other person a reason to like you, he or she will think better of you subconsciously just for indulging this or her ego.
Join us December 3 as visiting scholar Tawanda Mukwende to explore objects including Shona headrests from the Met collection and historical sites like Great Zimbabwe.
Learn more: https://t.co/3ruAFyoMiw