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1968, Lesotho, Javelin Thrower Rock Paintings 1968, Lesotho, Cranes

_Ars longa, vita brevis - Latin
(Art is long, life is short )_

_Subjects_

_Paleolithic art is normally classified as representing animals or
humans or as being nonfigurative (taking the form of signs and
symbols). Nearly all animals are depicted in profile, most of them
adults of a recognizable species; many, however, are incomplete or
ambiguous, and a few are imaginary, like the Lascaux "unicorn".
Scenes, in which figures are shown interacting, are very hard to
identify in Paleolithic art since it is often impossible to prove a
deliberate association between figures as opposed to their simple
juxtaposition. Only a very few definite scenes have been identified.
The animals depicted in Paleolithic are overwhelmingly the horse and
the bison, although other species (such as mammoth or deer) dominate
at particular sites. Carnivores are rare; fish and birds are far more
plentiful in portable art than in cave art. Insects and recognizable
plants are limited to a few examples in portable art. Paleolithic art
is therefore not an accumulation of observations of nature. It has
meaning and structure, with different species predominating in
different periods and regions. While hand stencils are relatively
common, representations of humans are scarce in cave art but are more
frequently depicted in portable art. The best known specimens are the
"Venus" figures, small statuettes depicting females of a wide span of
ages and types.
Nonfigurative marks are far more abundant than figurative depictions.
They include a wide range of motifs, from a single dot or line to
complex constructions, and to extensive panels of linear marks. Signs
can be totally isolated in a cave, clustered on their own panels, or
closely associated with figurative images. The simpler nonfigurative
motifs are abundant and widespread. The more complex are
extraordinarily variable and are restricted in space and time; they
could be ethnic markers, delineating Paleolithic groups.
_

Monaco, 1989. Petrogliphs, Mercantour Natl. Park 1985, Brazil. Deer -
Cerca Grande, Lizard - Lapa do Caboclo, Running Deer - Grande Abrigo
de Santana do Riacho Monaco, 1989. Petrogliphs, Mercantour Natl. Park
Monaco, 1989. Petrogliphs, Mercantour Natl. Park Monaco, 1989.
Petrogliphs, Mercantour Natl. Park

_The Meaning of Cave Art
Paleolithic cave art was first thought to be purely decorative, with
no complex meaning. This view arose from portable art. But knowledge
of cave art expanded as further discoveries were made, and it became
clear that there is a complex, albeit undeciphered, meaning behind the
subject matter of cave art and its location. A restricted range of
species is depicted; paintings, drawings, and engravings are
frequently found in inaccessible places within caves; there are
associations of figures; there are enigmatic signs, purposely
incomplete or ambiguous figures, and caves that were decorated but
apparently not inhabited.
Early this century, the functional theory of sympathetic magic was
applied to Paleolithic art. According to this theory, the animals were
drawn in order to affect real animals in some way. Ritual and magic
were seen in every aspect of Paleolithic art-in the breakage of
decorated objects and in representation of animals ritually killed
with images of missiles or even physically attacked. In fact, very few
Paleolithic animal figures have missiles on them; missiles also occur
on some human figures and many caves have no images of this type at
all. There are no clear hunting scenes, animal bones found in many
decorated caves bear little relation to the species depicted on the
walls, and it is clear that the motivation behind cave art was
distinct from the practicalities of a life that produced the faunal
remains.
_

Cuba, 1970. Petrogliphs. Ambrosio Cave, Varadero Matanzas. Cuba, 1970.
Petrogliphs. Pichardo Cave;,Cubitas Camaguey _Cuba, 1970. Petrogliphs.
Ambrosio Cave, diff. _Cuba, 1970. Petrogliphs. Garcia Ribiou Cave,
Havana

_Another popular theory was that of fertility magic, according to
which the depiction of the animals was linked to the hope that they
would reproduce to provide food in the future. Yet in few instances is
the gender of the animals shown, and genitalia are almost always shown
discreetly. As for copulation, in the whole of Paleolithic iconography
there are only one or two (very dubious) examples.
Most Paleolithic art is clearly not about hunting or reproduction. In
the 1950s two French scholars, Annette Laming-Emperaire and André
Leroi-Gourhan, concluded that caves had been decorated systematically
rather than in a random fashion. They treated cave art as a carefully
laid-out composition within each cave and saw the animals not as
portraits but as symbols. They discovered repeated associations: the
numerically dominant horses and bovids, concentrated in central
panels, were thought to represent a basic duality that was assumed to
be sexual. They also divided the signs into male (phallic) and female
(vulvar) categories.
Some researchers are currently seeking to establish firm and detailed
criteria for identifying the work of individual artists. The gender of
Paleolithic artists is unknown, and it cannot be assumed that the art
was created exclusively by and for men. Others are finding a
correspondence between the richest panels and good acoustics,
suggesting that sound played an important part in whatever ceremonies
accompanied the production of cave art.
No single explanation can suffice for the whole of Paleolithic art: it
comprises at least two-thirds of known art history, covering 25
millennia and a vast area of the world. (After Microsoft Encarta 1996)_

_Background: Masked negroid woman. The period of round-headed men.
Probably later as the early Neolithic. Sefar, Eastern Tassili
Mountains, Middle Sahara, Algeria._

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References

1. http://www.values.ch/Art-Gallery/Rock-Paintings/rock-paintings.htm
2. http://www.values.ch/Art-Gallery/Rock-Paintings/rock-paintings2.htm
3. http://www.values.ch/Art-Gallery/Rock-Paintings/rock-paintings3.htm
4. http://www.values.ch/indexold.html
5. http://www.values.ch/self.htm
6. http://www.values.ch/toc-count.htm