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M2 Pro Mac Mini is Better than the Apple Studio - Here''s Why 📱 👍 🍎 ❓ https://applevideos.co.uk/mac-studio/m2-pro-mac-mini-is-better-than-the-apple-studio-heres-why
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New Mascot of @teenyteensy 😍😍😍 grab em all at @gramedia.com @gramediaciptocirebon . . Picture by @nadhilaputri25 #teenyteensy #inpartnership #gramedia #ryuurevoir (at Teeny Teensy) https://www.instagram.com/p/B310PjCnMUy/?igshid=1186ifzylu9a
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#Funko x ASPCA Special-Edition Pops! With Purpose Collection Available Now
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Teens React To First Kiss Scenes | Netflix VS Reality
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New BMW Steering Wheel Works for Simulators and a Real Race Car
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Fantastic new mural by @vhils in Medan, Sumatra!! ❤️❤️❤️ #inpartnership @splashandburn #streetart #urbanart #urbanwalls #urbanwallsbrazil #cool #art #mural #artinstallation #medan #sumatra #indonesia #contemporaryart #❤️
#medan#contemporaryart#sumatra#cool#mural#art#artinstallation#urbanwalls#urbanart#❤️#streetart#indonesia#inpartnership#urbanwallsbrazil
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''Allerdale Community Partnership'' now looking very much like a nuclear front group, - Nuclear Free Local Authorities reveal
”Allerdale Community Partnership” now looking very much like a nuclear front group, – Nuclear Free Local Authorities reveal
The Allerdale Community Partnership may boast that its latest appointeesare ‘independent’, but, as the Nuclear Free Local Authorities havediscovered, a little research reveals their business links to the nuclearindustry. The Community Partnership is the lead local body working inpartnership with Nuclear Waste Services, an arm of the NuclearDecommissioning Agency, to determine if Allerdale could…
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NLC offers free medical services in Abuja
Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) who’s job is to create opportunities for Nigerian workers, are currently offering free medical services to residents of Abuja. According to Punch, “Nigeria Labour Congress, inpartnership with the International Labour Organisation, offered free medical services to residents of Ndakwo community, beside Sunny Vale, Abuja on Saturday. “The NLC President, Ayuba Wabba,…
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Hareter Babatunde Oralusi, asthe Deputy Secretary-General of the Nigerian Labor Cooperative Society, he wascredited with re-planning the association into a universally recognizedsocial endeavor. Under this assignment, Oralusi additionally start, plan andcoordinated the principal International Cooperative Conference in Nigeria inpartnership with the Federal Ministry of Agriculture pointed toward working with financeand speculation for miniature and little undertakings, low-pay workers andgrassroots networks.
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There is nothing sexy about dating a forever bill, dont trust her.
Thats why....
Attraction is multi-faceted It is multi-layered It is multidimensional.
It is not just the arousal one can get from making love but the legacy one can establish my making a life fit for HIGH VALUE descendents produced from a fruitful union. Pursuing a woman strictly based on looks is like gambling with Monopoly money. You play but you produce. don't
A woman who is an ASSET knows looking good is the interest, the APR, the little extra being added on top of the foundation, the principal, the initial investment, the deposits. She knows her core. Her drive. Her passion. Herinvestment in self and her financial life and separately her happiness and that's the real reason why any KING would wife her as his QUEEN and make a life with his "good thing." Not just "hit it" but build an everlasting legacy inpartnership with his love.
The problem with pursuing a big booty and a smile.... is that you might chase a$$...that has no assets.
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Denver’s Hamilton run postponed
#inpartnership🤝 ⬆️ 🏟 🖌
get headlines https://thecherrycreeknews.com
In partnership with the producers, we have made the difficult yet important decision to postpone the 2020 Hamilton engagement due to the continuing impact of COVID-19 on the Denver Center for the Performing Arts, restrictions around large gatherings in enclosed public venues and out of an abundance of caution. Hamilton was scheduled to play The Buell Theatre August 12-October 4, 2020. We are actively working to secure alternate dates and look forward to making that exciting announcement once details are finalized.
The challenges and uncertainties around this health crisis have had an enormous impact on all of our communities, and the theatrical community has been uniquely challenged. I want to express my sincere thanks to our subscribers, donors, ticket-buyers, and all who support the work of the Denver Center. It is our sole focus to plan for that day in the future when we welcome you back to the theatre in a manner that is healthy and safe. Until then, thank you so much for your ongoing support. If you are in a position to do so, please consider making a donation to help our recovery fund.
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Daily Deals: Cabinets, Backpacks, Projectors, Soundbars, Nike Sale And More!
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To commemorate the 500th anniversary of the death of Leonardo da Vinci inFrance, the Louvre is preparing a unique retrospective of da Vinci’s artistic career,opening to the public on 24 October 2019. As part of this landmark exhibition, theLouvre will present the museum’s first virtual reality (VR) experience, inpartnership with HTC VIVE Arts and Emissive, which will bring to life the story ofthe Mona Lisa, da Vinci’s most famous masterpiece.
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How This 24-Year-Old Entrepreneur Is Updating the Biergarten Experience with Street Art
The joy of drinking beer outside amongst friends is well documented, but a 24-year old entrepreneur and his partner have found a new way to liven up a celebrated drinking tradition. Gabriele Maurello, who along with partner Tyagi Schwartz co-founded Brooklyn Beer Garden, is banking that this hybrid street art gallery and craft beer garden can help rethink the modern biergarten concept, which has become synonymous with any outdoor patio or rooftop in recent years.
So what makes Brooklyn Beer Garden unique from the venues that hire artists to paint custom murals in an attempt to create an “in” with the neighborhood? Perhaps it’s the narrative that something was literally created out of nothing by a community of artists who were given the creative freedom to follow their own vision.
The Build Out
The first Brooklyn Beer Garden resides in a forgotten lot within the industrial but artistic neighborhood of Bushwick, Brooklyn. “The main material used in Brooklyn Beer Garden are pallets. We literally built the place ourselves, blood, sweat, and tears over the course of 4 months. Once the buildout of the bar was complete, the artists began to come in. From one artist, to five, to 20, we organically created a community,” describes co-founder Maurello, who at the age of 24 has jumped right into the role of co-owner.
Visitors can sip on a brew and purchase a piece of art to take home. Courtesy of Justin Schwartz
However, building an art gallery where guests can purchase artwork while mingling over craft beer only works if you can get people to visit. To gain the attention of the crowd, Maurello relied on his upbringing growing up in a restaurant family.
Family Matters
“My entire childhoodconsisted of being next to my father in his Italian restaurants,” Maurellorecalls. “From peeling carrots in the kitchen to being a busboy, I learned theins and outs, but one thing my father always told me as a kid was ‘don’t stoplearning how to learn.’”
One of the first movesMaurello made in his career was teaming with Tyagi Schwartz, an experiencedentertainment professional who helped Maurello execute the vision thatultimately became Brooklyn Beer Garden. The concept has already branched out ofits Bushwick headquarters with a residency at The William Vale Hotel this summer, and isalso appearing at events like Art Basel inMiami, where Brooklyn Beer Garden plans to visit for the second timelater this year.
View of the Brooklyn Beer Garden location in Bushwick. Courtesy of Justin Schwartz
Though incorporatingstreet art into their space is a trend many business owners have takenadvantage of, the idea that artists had the creative freedom to design a beergarden from the ground up that doubles as a gallery is certified original.“Introducing local street artists to our guests, providing them with a marketplace to purchase art and experience a variety of Brooklyn brewed beers andwines is an excellent extension of the kind of programming we create for thehotel guests and the neighborhood all the time, “ says David Lemmond, the generalmanager at The William Vale Hotel. The luxury hotel includes a restaurant fromchef Andrew Carmellini, a rooftop lounge with skyline views of Manhattan, and adonut cafe from chef Wylie Dufresne, all of which puts Brooklyn Beer Garden indistinguished company.
For the artists, thevenue is a safe haven for escaping the usual legalities of decorating someoneelse’s property, not to mention the typical politics of the art world. Streetartists like SacSix and Isabelle Ewing have used the eventplatform to showcase their talents and sell their artwork. “Even the beststreet art galleries select and represent only the top 5% of street artists.That leaves a lot of other talented artists out in the cold. The Brooklyn BeerGarden has embraced these street artists and have welcomed them into their artfamily,” says Miami-born artist SacSix, whose work includes collaborations withAdidas.
Artist Dirt Cobain at Brooklyn Beer Garden.
It’s this sense ofcommunity that differentiates Brooklyn Beer Garden from the city’s countlessoptions. Though using art to attract guests is not new, from some artistsperspective, most restaurants and bars don’t do a great job. “A lot ofrestaurants and bars just slap up art on the walls not putting intoconsideration their aesthetic. Kudos to them for supporting the arts but whenthey do this it can not only make the business look bad, but can cheapen theartwork and or take away from the work,” says Brooklyn-based muralist IsabelleEwing. While it’s understandable that most restaurants would put their resourcesinto food and drink, the visual aesthetic of a dining room plays a crucial rolein the overall dining experience.
Beauty Is in the Eye of the Beer Holder
However, it’s not justthe imagery that makes Brooklyn Beer Garden unique. The selection of beveragesare just as important when thinking of ways to stimulate the crowd. InBrooklyn, local craft breweries like Sixpoint and Five Boroughs, along withcider from Brooklyn CiderHouse and wine from Red Hook Winery,are all available to help guests unwind. Brooklyn Beer Garden even found a wayto take advantage of the canned cocktail trend with its very own drink inpartnership with All-Wise Meaderycalled “The Brooklyn Mule.”
While the concept has proven popular with Brooklyn’s artistic crowd, growing the concept to other cities may prove challenging. In Boston, the popularity of summer beer gardens has caused friction with restaurant owners to the point where state legislature is considering limiting the number of permits issued to beer garden operators. Like most venues, Brooklyn Beer Garden will have to find creative ways to keep the crowd entertained, which is why putting the focus on building loyalty with artists above all else should come in handy. “A lot of career goals that I had set for myself years ago were accomplished thanks to them, like becoming apart of the Bushwick Collective, showing at Art Basel Miami, painting murals all over the city, the list goes on,” says Ewing. When it comes to where people choose to hang out, sometimes collaboration paints a prettier picture.
More must-read stories from Fortune:
—How millennials’ wine preferences differ from boomers’
—This restaurateur traded fine dining for Ben Franklin’s favorite milk cocktail
—Canned vs. bottled: Which type of wine is more sustainable?
—5 Irish whiskey brands you need to try now
—Beyond Prosecco: Italy’s other, better bubbles
Follow Fortune on Flipboard to stay up-to-date on the latest news and analysis.
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The post How This 24-Year-Old Entrepreneur Is Updating the Biergarten Experience with Street Art appeared first on WeeklyReviewer.
from WeeklyReviewer https://weeklyreviewer.com/how-this-24-year-old-entrepreneur-is-updating-the-biergarten-experience-with-street-art/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=how-this-24-year-old-entrepreneur-is-updating-the-biergarten-experience-with-street-art from WeeklyReviewer https://weeklyreviewer.tumblr.com/post/186293753557
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How This 24-Year-Old Entrepreneur Is Updating the Biergarten Experience with Street Art
The joy of drinking beer outside amongst friends is well documented, but a 24-year old entrepreneur and his partner have found a new way to liven up a celebrated drinking tradition. Gabriele Maurello, who along with partner Tyagi Schwartz co-founded Brooklyn Beer Garden, is banking that this hybrid street art gallery and craft beer garden can help rethink the modern biergarten concept, which has become synonymous with any outdoor patio or rooftop in recent years.
So what makes Brooklyn Beer Garden unique from the venues that hire artists to paint custom murals in an attempt to create an “in” with the neighborhood? Perhaps it’s the narrative that something was literally created out of nothing by a community of artists who were given the creative freedom to follow their own vision.
The Build Out
The first Brooklyn Beer Garden resides in a forgotten lot within the industrial but artistic neighborhood of Bushwick, Brooklyn. “The main material used in Brooklyn Beer Garden are pallets. We literally built the place ourselves, blood, sweat, and tears over the course of 4 months. Once the buildout of the bar was complete, the artists began to come in. From one artist, to five, to 20, we organically created a community,” describes co-founder Maurello, who at the age of 24 has jumped right into the role of co-owner.
Visitors can sip on a brew and purchase a piece of art to take home. Courtesy of Justin Schwartz
However, building an art gallery where guests can purchase artwork while mingling over craft beer only works if you can get people to visit. To gain the attention of the crowd, Maurello relied on his upbringing growing up in a restaurant family.
Family Matters
“My entire childhoodconsisted of being next to my father in his Italian restaurants,” Maurellorecalls. “From peeling carrots in the kitchen to being a busboy, I learned theins and outs, but one thing my father always told me as a kid was ‘don’t stoplearning how to learn.’”
One of the first movesMaurello made in his career was teaming with Tyagi Schwartz, an experiencedentertainment professional who helped Maurello execute the vision thatultimately became Brooklyn Beer Garden. The concept has already branched out ofits Bushwick headquarters with a residency at The William Vale Hotel this summer, and isalso appearing at events like Art Basel inMiami, where Brooklyn Beer Garden plans to visit for the second timelater this year.
View of the Brooklyn Beer Garden location in Bushwick. Courtesy of Justin Schwartz
Though incorporatingstreet art into their space is a trend many business owners have takenadvantage of, the idea that artists had the creative freedom to design a beergarden from the ground up that doubles as a gallery is certified original.“Introducing local street artists to our guests, providing them with a marketplace to purchase art and experience a variety of Brooklyn brewed beers andwines is an excellent extension of the kind of programming we create for thehotel guests and the neighborhood all the time, “ says David Lemmond, the generalmanager at The William Vale Hotel. The luxury hotel includes a restaurant fromchef Andrew Carmellini, a rooftop lounge with skyline views of Manhattan, and adonut cafe from chef Wylie Dufresne, all of which puts Brooklyn Beer Garden indistinguished company.
For the artists, thevenue is a safe haven for escaping the usual legalities of decorating someoneelse’s property, not to mention the typical politics of the art world. Streetartists like SacSix and Isabelle Ewing have used the eventplatform to showcase their talents and sell their artwork. “Even the beststreet art galleries select and represent only the top 5% of street artists.That leaves a lot of other talented artists out in the cold. The Brooklyn BeerGarden has embraced these street artists and have welcomed them into their artfamily,” says Miami-born artist SacSix, whose work includes collaborations withAdidas.
Artist Dirt Cobain at Brooklyn Beer Garden.
It’s this sense ofcommunity that differentiates Brooklyn Beer Garden from the city’s countlessoptions. Though using art to attract guests is not new, from some artistsperspective, most restaurants and bars don’t do a great job. “A lot ofrestaurants and bars just slap up art on the walls not putting intoconsideration their aesthetic. Kudos to them for supporting the arts but whenthey do this it can not only make the business look bad, but can cheapen theartwork and or take away from the work,” says Brooklyn-based muralist IsabelleEwing. While it’s understandable that most restaurants would put their resourcesinto food and drink, the visual aesthetic of a dining room plays a crucial rolein the overall dining experience.
Beauty Is in the Eye of the Beer Holder
However, it’s not justthe imagery that makes Brooklyn Beer Garden unique. The selection of beveragesare just as important when thinking of ways to stimulate the crowd. InBrooklyn, local craft breweries like Sixpoint and Five Boroughs, along withcider from Brooklyn CiderHouse and wine from Red Hook Winery,are all available to help guests unwind. Brooklyn Beer Garden even found a wayto take advantage of the canned cocktail trend with its very own drink inpartnership with All-Wise Meaderycalled “The Brooklyn Mule.”
While the concept has proven popular with Brooklyn’s artistic crowd, growing the concept to other cities may prove challenging. In Boston, the popularity of summer beer gardens has caused friction with restaurant owners to the point where state legislature is considering limiting the number of permits issued to beer garden operators. Like most venues, Brooklyn Beer Garden will have to find creative ways to keep the crowd entertained, which is why putting the focus on building loyalty with artists above all else should come in handy. “A lot of career goals that I had set for myself years ago were accomplished thanks to them, like becoming apart of the Bushwick Collective, showing at Art Basel Miami, painting murals all over the city, the list goes on,” says Ewing. When it comes to where people choose to hang out, sometimes collaboration paints a prettier picture.
More must-read stories from Fortune:
—How millennials’ wine preferences differ from boomers’
—This restaurateur traded fine dining for Ben Franklin’s favorite milk cocktail
—Canned vs. bottled: Which type of wine is more sustainable?
—5 Irish whiskey brands you need to try now
—Beyond Prosecco: Italy’s other, better bubbles
Follow Fortune on Flipboard to stay up-to-date on the latest news and analysis.
Credit: Source link
The post How This 24-Year-Old Entrepreneur Is Updating the Biergarten Experience with Street Art appeared first on WeeklyReviewer.
from WeeklyReviewer https://weeklyreviewer.com/how-this-24-year-old-entrepreneur-is-updating-the-biergarten-experience-with-street-art/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=how-this-24-year-old-entrepreneur-is-updating-the-biergarten-experience-with-street-art from WeeklyReviewer https://weeklyreviewer.tumblr.com/post/186293753557
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How This 24-Year-Old Entrepreneur Is Updating the Biergarten Experience with Street Art
The joy of drinking beer outside amongst friends is well documented, but a 24-year old entrepreneur and his partner have found a new way to liven up a celebrated drinking tradition. Gabriele Maurello, who along with partner Tyagi Schwartz co-founded Brooklyn Beer Garden, is banking that this hybrid street art gallery and craft beer garden can help rethink the modern biergarten concept, which has become synonymous with any outdoor patio or rooftop in recent years.
So what makes Brooklyn Beer Garden unique from the venues that hire artists to paint custom murals in an attempt to create an “in” with the neighborhood? Perhaps it’s the narrative that something was literally created out of nothing by a community of artists who were given the creative freedom to follow their own vision.
The Build Out
The first Brooklyn Beer Garden resides in a forgotten lot within the industrial but artistic neighborhood of Bushwick, Brooklyn. “The main material used in Brooklyn Beer Garden are pallets. We literally built the place ourselves, blood, sweat, and tears over the course of 4 months. Once the buildout of the bar was complete, the artists began to come in. From one artist, to five, to 20, we organically created a community,” describes co-founder Maurello, who at the age of 24 has jumped right into the role of co-owner.
Visitors can sip on a brew and purchase a piece of art to take home. Courtesy of Justin Schwartz
However, building an art gallery where guests can purchase artwork while mingling over craft beer only works if you can get people to visit. To gain the attention of the crowd, Maurello relied on his upbringing growing up in a restaurant family.
Family Matters
“My entire childhoodconsisted of being next to my father in his Italian restaurants,” Maurellorecalls. “From peeling carrots in the kitchen to being a busboy, I learned theins and outs, but one thing my father always told me as a kid was ‘don’t stoplearning how to learn.’”
One of the first movesMaurello made in his career was teaming with Tyagi Schwartz, an experiencedentertainment professional who helped Maurello execute the vision thatultimately became Brooklyn Beer Garden. The concept has already branched out ofits Bushwick headquarters with a residency at The William Vale Hotel this summer, and isalso appearing at events like Art Basel inMiami, where Brooklyn Beer Garden plans to visit for the second timelater this year.
View of the Brooklyn Beer Garden location in Bushwick. Courtesy of Justin Schwartz
Though incorporatingstreet art into their space is a trend many business owners have takenadvantage of, the idea that artists had the creative freedom to design a beergarden from the ground up that doubles as a gallery is certified original.“Introducing local street artists to our guests, providing them with a marketplace to purchase art and experience a variety of Brooklyn brewed beers andwines is an excellent extension of the kind of programming we create for thehotel guests and the neighborhood all the time, “ says David Lemmond, the generalmanager at The William Vale Hotel. The luxury hotel includes a restaurant fromchef Andrew Carmellini, a rooftop lounge with skyline views of Manhattan, and adonut cafe from chef Wylie Dufresne, all of which puts Brooklyn Beer Garden indistinguished company.
For the artists, thevenue is a safe haven for escaping the usual legalities of decorating someoneelse’s property, not to mention the typical politics of the art world. Streetartists like SacSix and Isabelle Ewing have used the eventplatform to showcase their talents and sell their artwork. “Even the beststreet art galleries select and represent only the top 5% of street artists.That leaves a lot of other talented artists out in the cold. The Brooklyn BeerGarden has embraced these street artists and have welcomed them into their artfamily,” says Miami-born artist SacSix, whose work includes collaborations withAdidas.
Artist Dirt Cobain at Brooklyn Beer Garden.
It’s this sense ofcommunity that differentiates Brooklyn Beer Garden from the city’s countlessoptions. Though using art to attract guests is not new, from some artistsperspective, most restaurants and bars don’t do a great job. “A lot ofrestaurants and bars just slap up art on the walls not putting intoconsideration their aesthetic. Kudos to them for supporting the arts but whenthey do this it can not only make the business look bad, but can cheapen theartwork and or take away from the work,” says Brooklyn-based muralist IsabelleEwing. While it’s understandable that most restaurants would put their resourcesinto food and drink, the visual aesthetic of a dining room plays a crucial rolein the overall dining experience.
Beauty Is in the Eye of the Beer Holder
However, it’s not justthe imagery that makes Brooklyn Beer Garden unique. The selection of beveragesare just as important when thinking of ways to stimulate the crowd. InBrooklyn, local craft breweries like Sixpoint and Five Boroughs, along withcider from Brooklyn CiderHouse and wine from Red Hook Winery,are all available to help guests unwind. Brooklyn Beer Garden even found a wayto take advantage of the canned cocktail trend with its very own drink inpartnership with All-Wise Meaderycalled “The Brooklyn Mule.”
While the concept has proven popular with Brooklyn’s artistic crowd, growing the concept to other cities may prove challenging. In Boston, the popularity of summer beer gardens has caused friction with restaurant owners to the point where state legislature is considering limiting the number of permits issued to beer garden operators. Like most venues, Brooklyn Beer Garden will have to find creative ways to keep the crowd entertained, which is why putting the focus on building loyalty with artists above all else should come in handy. “A lot of career goals that I had set for myself years ago were accomplished thanks to them, like becoming apart of the Bushwick Collective, showing at Art Basel Miami, painting murals all over the city, the list goes on,” says Ewing. When it comes to where people choose to hang out, sometimes collaboration paints a prettier picture.
More must-read stories from Fortune:
—How millennials’ wine preferences differ from boomers’
—This restaurateur traded fine dining for Ben Franklin’s favorite milk cocktail
—Canned vs. bottled: Which type of wine is more sustainable?
—5 Irish whiskey brands you need to try now
—Beyond Prosecco: Italy’s other, better bubbles
Follow Fortune on Flipboard to stay up-to-date on the latest news and analysis.
Credit: Source link
The post How This 24-Year-Old Entrepreneur Is Updating the Biergarten Experience with Street Art appeared first on WeeklyReviewer.
from WeeklyReviewer https://weeklyreviewer.com/how-this-24-year-old-entrepreneur-is-updating-the-biergarten-experience-with-street-art/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=how-this-24-year-old-entrepreneur-is-updating-the-biergarten-experience-with-street-art
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