Prehistoric Art. First skeleton remains of the common ancestor of Homo sapiens from about 400,000 years ago found in Africa Oldest human remains from.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Creative Revolution Paleolithic Cave Art 35,000 BC – 14,000 BC
Advertisements

Yellow Horse Prehistoric Cave Art 4 th Grade Art Smart.
Chapter 2 – The Stone Ages and Early Cultures
Why do we do art?. We can’t help ourselves Oldest (290, ,000 years old) known “art object;” Auditorium Cave, India.
Road to the Agricultural Revolution
Paleolithic Cave Art 35,000 BC – 14,000 BC
Origins of Mankind and Civilization
WH I.2.  Humans, or homo sapiens, emerged in East Africa between 100,000 and 400,000 years ago. Humans migrated from Africa to Eurasia, Australia, and.
Located in southwestern France Discovered by four teenage boys in 1940 They kept it secret for a week before telling their teacher Made around 20,000 BC.
The Paleolithic Era (or Old Stone Age) is a period of prehistory from about 2.6 million years ago to around years ago. The Neolithic Era(or New.
Introduction to Prehistoric Art
Investigating the past
The First Humans. 65 Million Years Ago DinosaursDinosaurs died out app 65 million years ago. The first human like hominids did not appear until around.
Main Idea Details The FRAME Key Topic is about Stone Ages.
The Paleolithic Era to the Agricultural Revolution
Chapter 1 Section 2 Notes. People gradually give up hunting and gathering and learn to cultivate crops, domesticate animals, and live in settled villages.
CH. 1.2 Humans Try To Control Nature. Achievements in Technology and Art People of the Old Stone Age were nomads, meaning they wandered from place to.
Global Pre-History. 1. Apollo 11 stones. Namibia. c. 25,500– 25,300 B.C.E. Charcoal on stone.
Pre-history. Key Terms Artifacts Culture Hominids Nomads Hunter-gatherers Agricultural Revolution Domestication Civilization Slash-and-burn farming.
Early Humans and the Prehistoric Record: Human-Plant Interaction
THE STONE AGES AND EARLY CULTURES CHAPTER 2. THE FIRST PEOPLE Humans on earth over 1 million years Writing has only existed about 5000 years Time before.
Artistic revolution Emergence of Mind ► Paleolithic world ► Economy/technology  Gatherer-hunters/opportunists  Stone, bone, fiber ► Origins of agriculture.
Also called Paleolithic Art (from the Greek for “old stone”) Cave Art Circa 30,000-15,000 BC or BCE.
PREHISTORIC ART & LASCAUX. Nearly 340 caves have now been discovered in France and Spain that contain art from prehistoric times.
Chapter 2 / Section 1 The First People.
Andrew Fetigan, Jamie Myers, Kelly Tignor HOMO SAPIENS.
Warm-up You are an Archaeologist at a dig site in Ethiopia and you uncover this unique rock, what is your initial hypothesis? Write 3-4 sentences summarizing.
2.01 The First People.
Prehistory Period 1: up to 600 BCE. Searching for Human Origins ▪ There are three main groups of scientists that search for and study the origins of humans.
Origin of Humans.
Chapter 1 Prehistory. Key terms ► Paleo-lithic: palaiós (Gk: old)líthos (Gk: stone). ► Meso-lithic: mesos (Gk: middle) ► Neo-lithic:néos (Gk: New) ► Mega-lithicmega.
Prehistory Images , B.C.E. 1. Study and sketch the painting and sculpture above 2. Describe the artwork using terms such as line, color,
The Stone Ages and Early Cultures Mr. Perkins Fall 2015.
Prehistoric Art 35,000 – 2,000 BCE (Before the Common Era)
Chapter One Section One. Exploring Prehistory Anthropologists study the skeletal remains of hominids (humans and early humanlike creatures) to learn what.
Chapter 2: The Stone Ages and Early Cultures 6 th Grade Social Studies.
DO NOW Primitive People and their Art
Warm Up: Why do you think the artists painted these pictures
Cro-Magnons: The First Painters
(A History of Cave Painting)
The Old Stone Age (The Paleolithic Era)
Chapter 2 – The Stone Ages and Early Cultures
Bellringer: 9/2 and 9/6 1. Pick up the papers on the desks at the front of the room. 2. Put your notes on your desk so I can check them as your first.
Chapter 2 – The Stone Ages and Early Cultures
Welcome to the Stone Age
Early Humans
Paleolithic Age vs. Neolithic Age
WHI.2 Early Humans.
Chapter 2 – The Stone Ages and Early Cultures
PREHISTORIC ART & LASCAUX
Neolithic 3rd phase of Stone Ages
The Stone Ages and Early Cultures
Chapter 2 – The Stone Ages and Early Cultures
Early humans and the rise of civlization
How did early man express his identity, culture, and religion?
Human Origins in Africa
Chapter 2 – The Stone Ages and Early Cultures
UNIT 1 Chapter 1 Section 1.
What Is History??? History is the story of people’s search to fulfill human needs and wants. World Intro.
PREHISTORY PROJECT ART BY ALBA RUIZ IRENE MARTIN AYA IBN EL KAID
CAVE ART IN THE TIME OF THE NEANDERTHAL
Prehistoric Art.
Early Humans
Prehistory and the Neolithic Revolution
Paleolithic Age vs. Neolithic Age
Paleolithic Era.
Chapter 2 Section 1 The First People
Chapter 2 Section 1 The First People
PREHISTORIC ART & LASCAUX
Course Code: HAC156-F Presented By: Sumbal Sarfraz.
Presentation transcript:

Prehistoric Art

First skeleton remains of the common ancestor of Homo sapiens from about 400,000 years ago found in Africa Oldest human remains from Omo Kibish, Ethiopia from about 195,000 YA By 20,000 BC, humans were on every continent except Antarctica

Some of the oldest human artifacts includes shells thought to make a necklace and incised ochre with geometric pattern (Blombos Cave, South Africa, 75,000 YA)

Blombos Cave, South Africa

Many of the oldest artifacts are identifiable as tools for cutting, chopping, and piercing

Oldest known figurative sculpture is the Venus of Hohle Fels Cave in Germany (35,000 YA)

Early pottery to hold food and water Pottery fragments from Xianrendong Cave, Jiangxi Province, China (about 22,000 YA)

Functional items become decorative and designed for use and beauty Spear thrower carved from reindeer antler (La Madeleine, France, 14,000 YA)

Cave artists painted the big mammals around them Bears, bison, and reindeer in France (Chauvet, 37,000 YA)

Elephants, boar and horses in India (Bhimbetka, 30,000 YA)

Antelope in Algeria (Tassili n’Ajjer, 10,000 YA)

Giraffes, tigers, zebras in Namibia (6,000 YA)

Do we have an obsession with the animals around us today?

Jeff Koons, Puppy, 1997

Louis Bourgeois, Maman, 1979

Cave artists also painted abstract and geometric patterns (El Castillo, Spain, 40,000 YA)

Was there a code to their visual language? (El Castillo, Spain, 40,000 YA)

A common theme across continents: artists traced their hands Cueva de los Manos, Argentina (13, ,000 YA)

It’s not a habit that disappeared.

How did the cave artists work?

They used rocks and minerals around them for different colors These colors found by Chuck Kritzon near his California home veways.com/paint_ a_mammoth.html] veways.com/paint_ a_mammoth.html

They made brushes from sticks, bone, rock, fur, and hair Used incised rocks to “erase” or make highlights in stone

They used reeds as blow guns for the first kind of spray painting

Cave artists erected scaffolding to paint images that were difficult to get to Some of the paintings are in tight spaces over 10 feet high

Prehistoric artists paid attention to composition and responded to their site Drew animals in twisted perspective with bodies in profile and heads frontal (Lascaux, 28, ,000 YA)

The cave artists used repetition to capture movement Edward Muybridge, The Attitudes of Animals in Motion, 1881

Horses, Chauvet Cave, France

What happened to the prehistoric artists? End of ice age + Neolithic revolution around 12,000 YA Development of agriculture: goats, sheep, pigs, cattle Domesticated farming Developing permanent settlements