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April 24, 2026

Why Swedish Schools Are Cutting Back on Digital Learning and Bringing Back Textbooks

Sweden’s eagerness to embrace digital learning may have been to its detriment. Like the rest of the world, the country wanted to be at the forefront when technology seemed to be the future. It became a global leader in digital schooling, and even preschoolers were required to use digital tools as of 2019. But that mandate has since been revoked, starting in 2025.

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April 24, 2026

Artist Transforms Painting Into a Spiritual Call To Protect the Earth

In her latest body of work, artist Ekaterina Sky reframes painting as something far more intimate than visual expression. For Sky, each piece functions as both a meditation and a call to action. Rooted in a belief that art can reconnect humanity to the natural world, Her evolving Prayer for the Earth series merges spirituality, environmental consciousness, and community participation.

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April 23, 2026

DRIFT Lights up the Los Angeles Sky With Drones in Honor of LACMA’s New David Geffen Galleries

The Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) marked the opening of the David Geffen Galleries, the new home of its permanent collection, with a gala packed with Hollywood celebrities. But for all the stars on sight, none shined brighter than the sky above the new building. For the evening’s big finale, the museum teamed up with DRIFT for a mesmerizing light show featuring 1,000 drones.

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April 23, 2026

Kintsugi-Inspired Tattoos Honor the Broken Parts of Ourselves Put Back Together

The Japanese art of kintsugi is a repair method that takes broken pottery and makes it more beautiful through visible mending. Metallic lacquer fills the cracks, shaping the piece into something recognizable but more special than before, as the breaks are now part of its story. A tattoo artist named Antonio, working under the moniker Sangre Blue, uses this idea as the basis for his beautiful body art.

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