What Is Paleolithic Art?
Cave Paintings and the Dawn of Human Creativity
9780226266633
9780226188065
What Is Paleolithic Art?
Cave Paintings and the Dawn of Human Creativity
Was it a trick of the light that drew our Stone Age ancestors into caves to paint in charcoal and red hematite, to watch the heads of lions, likenesses of bison, horses, and aurochs in the reliefs of the walls, as they flickered by firelight? Or was it something deeper—a creative impulse, a spiritual dawn, a shamanistic conception of the world efflorescing in the dark, dank spaces beneath the surface of the earth where the spirits were literally at hand?
In this book, Jean Clottes, one of the most renowned figures in the study of cave paintings, pursues an answer to this “why” of Paleolithic art. While other books focus on particular sites and surveys, Clottes’s work is a contemplative journey across the world, a personal reflection on how we have viewed these paintings in the past, what we learn from looking at them across geographies, and what these paintings may have meant—what function they may have served—for their artists. Steeped in Clottes’s shamanistic theories of cave painting, What Is Paleolithic Art? travels from well-known Ice Age sites like Chauvet, Altamira, and Lascaux to visits with contemporary aboriginal artists, evoking a continuum between the cave paintings of our prehistoric past and the living rock art of today. Clottes’s work lifts us from the darkness of our Paleolithic origins to reveal, by firelight, how we think, why we create, why we believe, and who we are.
In this book, Jean Clottes, one of the most renowned figures in the study of cave paintings, pursues an answer to this “why” of Paleolithic art. While other books focus on particular sites and surveys, Clottes’s work is a contemplative journey across the world, a personal reflection on how we have viewed these paintings in the past, what we learn from looking at them across geographies, and what these paintings may have meant—what function they may have served—for their artists. Steeped in Clottes’s shamanistic theories of cave painting, What Is Paleolithic Art? travels from well-known Ice Age sites like Chauvet, Altamira, and Lascaux to visits with contemporary aboriginal artists, evoking a continuum between the cave paintings of our prehistoric past and the living rock art of today. Clottes’s work lifts us from the darkness of our Paleolithic origins to reveal, by firelight, how we think, why we create, why we believe, and who we are.
208 pages | 28 halftones, 2 line drawings | 6 x 9 | © 2016
Art: Art--General Studies
Biological Sciences: Paleobiology, Geology, and Paleontology
Reviews
Table of Contents
Introduction
Chapter One: What Is the Correct Way to Approach Art in Caves and Shelters?
Chapter Two: Encountering Multiple Realities on Other Continents
Chapter Three: Perceptions of the World, Functions of the Art, and the Artists
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Chapter One: What Is the Correct Way to Approach Art in Caves and Shelters?
Chapter Two: Encountering Multiple Realities on Other Continents
Chapter Three: Perceptions of the World, Functions of the Art, and the Artists
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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