Art has great significance and beauty; from other
places in other kinds of ways, art was formed to be fascinating. Art
has dated back to prehistoric times to the paleolithic period to cave
paintings, wall sculpting, little figures etc. Paleolithic cave art
began around 30,000BCE to 10,000BCE. Homo sapiens were originally the
first peoples to roam the earth and were also the first artists and
writers. During that time, Homo sapiens began to start using their
minds to be creative, making tools for survival or creating images in
cave walls for entertainment. There are over two hundred caves
throughout Europe, some are famous for its art and research like in
south-west France or northern Spain. When the Homo sapiens started
doing the paintings, its theme was based on animals that lived around
that period. There are three different categories that were drawn:
Humans, Animals and Signs for communication or symbolism. Some of
the creations on the wall are evidence of what use to live during the
Paleolithic period, every drawing of an animal that looks very
different from the animals today are the generations from the past
animals that were here before our time. Researchers would study the
symbols that the Homo sapiens used to figure out what they mean.
Cave painting is great evidence for researchers to
study of what was here before our time, with different styles of
animals and maybe studying what was used to make the paint.This art
is important because this shows us the creation of humans making art
for the first time in history. Cave paintings is one of the oldest
art in the world, its the birth of painting and sculpting. Scientists
work to study these paintings and these artifacts to study our stone
age ancestors and what they used and what the painted. Showing these
different species of animals gives scientists to study more and
finding information of these old creatures. This is also important to
people that want to become artists or story book illustrators, these
prints and figures on the walls are made from minds of people who
were here over 45,000 BCE. Till present day, people visit the caves
in Europe to look at the artwork from the Paleolithic period to study
or to be fascinated. Till present day artists are bringing back the
style of cave paintings but onto canvas paper instead of the cave
walls.
Cave paintings were one of the first art to
actually have image that lend to another image like a movie with
different scenes. During the paleolithic era, Homo sapiens didn't
have a language to speak but they used their art to communicate with
other members of their groups. Cave paintings were not only used for
communication, it was also used for educating the young children at
the time. The elders would explain the paintings to children
depicting a story of what happened in the painting. Cave paintings
are a form of story telling, and would have shown a hunt, or an event
from years before the younger generations were born. They would then
be told to them as a part of oral history. The Homo sapiens didn't
have much to do for entertainment, but they would use the paintings
to create stories to make others interested in listening. By looking
at it, you can see the depiction of what was going on inside the
painting,the elder would then explain or tell the story of the
ceremony or event. Cave paintings were like comics, each one of the
figures drawn is in a action form and the little prints on the
paintings is the word bubbles. Legends were also told through the
paintings our ancestors done in order to show others the things they
seen. There were different species of mammals that have existed that
we did not see, but thanks to our ancestors we can look and research
on the different animals that died long ago. In the picture of the
Rainbow-serpent rock, originates from the country of Australia and
has been in rituals and in legends of the creations of human beings.
It has has a part for the weather as in the generation of rain,
storms, floods and the reproductive system.
Dating back to 30,000 years ago (BCE), they didn't have
the modern tools have artists have to paint. The homo sapiens would
use their ingers,
sticks, and pads of fur or moss to make the cave walls more nature
based and with help of their tools. They would make dotes and do
sketching with the coloured materials, charcoal, and coming up with
the first spray paint technique using a hollow bone or their mouths
and spraying it on the walls to make the spray art. How the homo
sapiens made paint
from dirt or charcoal mixed with spit or animal fat.
This man demonstrates the way of making a hand print
with getting the palm full of paint using the spray paint technique.
He is holding a bone in his mouth which he blows through that is
spreading the paint every where on top of his hand. On the right, it
shows the result of his hand, in the paleolithic period, hand prints
were mainly the signatures of the homo sapiens to show others that a
human was there. There is this artist named Alison Deerborn, she is
currently living in Colorado,
but was born and raised in Vermont. Her art is inspired by the cave
paintings of Chauvet and Lascaux, France and Altamira, Spain and also
African rock art. Her art is originally based off of Paleolithic art
that was dated to 30,000-40,000 year ago. With
thick layers of acrylic medium, she first carves her images into the
canvas, then once dry, adds colour to the texture using vibrant earth
tones. Homo sapiens in some parts of Europe would develop a way on
how to make the paintings on the cave walls more realistic, they
would carve out some pieces then would paint over the carved areas on
the walls to make it look like the animals, humans or symbols were
coming out. As Alison carves hers on canvas, it gives off that same
method but only on canvas instead of rocks.
Cave paintings had made many changes in modern things
that took place in the palaeolithic era, but the paintings of animals
were the main creations on the cave walls. Different animals were
painted differently from the body shape and skin colour from what
the homo sapiens see them. Homo sapiens and artists in the present
day create paintings of what they viewed, Modern artists visually
looked at nature/animals to create a master piece because they
practise at painting and drawing a lot. Animal paintings are
fascinating to glance at; they are so realistic and the background in
what the artist puts in there (usually) looks beautiful. In
palaeolithic art, the homo sapiens draw what they have seen like
animals or any kind of creatures that crossed their paths in life.
For making humans on the wall of a cave was only lines and a round
head but for animals, the homo sapiens went further into details on
the animals. Nature was mostly painted in the caves, with animals
fighting, running, eating, or even aggressively chasing after other
animals. Cave paintings influence modern nature art because of the
beauty of nature, the innocence of the animals and the creation of
what our minds see in front of us to paint. It gives artists the
patience and ability to create a master piece of what we view and our
homo sapien ancestors had a good memory of what the animals looked
like. Nature was the main topic that the homo sapiens painted because
it is the first nature art that was made over 30,000 years ago (BCE),
it was the master pieces of what they drew inside of themselves,
drawing animals that have extinct with their fat is an interesting
fact on how they can gather what they can use to make these
paintings.
References
Infoplease: Encyclopedia, Almanac, Atlas, Biographies, Dictionary, Thesaurus. Free online reference, research& homework help. | Infoplease.com. http://www.infoplease.com/encyclopedia/entertainment/paleolithic-art.html.
Dearborn, Alison. "About Sacred Cave." Alison Dearborn. http://sacredcave.com/about-the-artist-2/.
Webexhibits. "Pigments through the Ages - Prehistory."
http://www.webexhibits.org/pigments/intro/early.html.
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