Answer:
Farming allowed humans to form permanent settlements and abandon their nomadic ways. Humans shifted from hunting and gathering models to fixed farming villages.
Yes they do. Based on how old the artwork is, who created it, and the condition that it is in, determines to value of the aforementioned artwork. <span />
Answer:
Art is any subjective representation of the world, according to the artist's gaze, who represents it according to his own perceptions, trying to give his representation an aesthetic sense. There are various forms of art, such as painting, music, photography, cinema, etc.
Two forms of art that surprise me because they are considered as such are photography and architecture. In photography, the artist does not create or represent a work, but simply captures a certain image that he has not modified; and architecture because the architect performs his work for a technical purpose, and only then for aesthetics.
No one is sure which made it at the very start as it is very old and has evolved majorly overtime but the first acoustic guitar that would he recognized as a guitar today was invented by Antonio de Torres Jurado and the first ever electric guitar was invented by George Beauchamp and Adolph Rickenbacker
While Susato's place of birth is unknown, some scholars believe that because of his name—Susato meaning de Soest, of the town of Soest — he may be from the town of that name in Westphalia, or the town of Soest in The Netherlands.
Not much is known about his early life, but he begins appearing in various Antwerp archives of around 1530 working as a calligrapher as well as an instrumentalist: trumpet, flute and tenor pipe are listed as instruments that he owned.
In 1543, he founded the first music publishing house using movable music type in the Low Countries. He could be found in Antwerp, "At the Sign of the Crumhorn." Until Susato set up his press in Antwerp, music printing had been done mainly in Italy, France and Germany. Soon afterwards, Susato was joined by Petrus Phalesius the Elder in Leuven and Christopher Plantin, also in Antwerp, and the Low Countries became a regional center of music publishing. It is possible that Susato also ran a musical instrument business, and he attempted several times to form partnerships with other publishers but none were successful. In 1561 his son Jacob Susato, who died in 1564, took over his publishing business. Tielman Susato first moved to Alkmaar, North Holland, and later to Sweden. The last known record of him dates from 1570.