I. Prehistoric Art Art: the first mode of expression? DU1701 Periods of Art History I Adrien Palladino, M.A., Ph.D. 450842@mail.muni.cz Prehistory History 3 millions years to c. 3’300 BCE c. 3’300 BCE to nowadays AntiquityNeolithicPaleolithic Middle Ages Modern Age Contemporary 3 millions to 10’000 BCE 10’000 to 3’300 BCE 3’300 BCE to 476 CE 476 to 1453 or 1492 1453–1789 1789–2020 etc…. Blombos cave, South Africa, deposits with artifacts (engraved and cross-hatched ochre), dated between 103,000–73,000 BCE Cuevas de la Manos, two different periods: 13,000–9,000 BCE and 7,000–3,300 BCE, Argentina, province of Santa Cruz, Patagonia Altamira cave, 20,000–16,590 BCE, Santillana del Mar, Cantabria, Spain Discovery of Lascaux, 1940 “Hall of the Bulls”, or “Rotunda”, Lascaux, 18,000– 17,000 BCE, Montignac, France Lamp, found in the Lascaux grotto, 11 x 22,5 x 3 cm, 17,000 BCE / Musée national de préhistoire, Eyzies-de-Tayac-Sireuil Scene from the shaft Lascaux Functions? “I am struck by the fact that new light is shed on our birth at the very moment when the perspective of death is appearing” Georges Bataille, Lascaux ou la naissance de l’art, 1955 Grotto of Chauvet-Pont-d’Arc (Ardèche, France), 38,000–32,000 BCE Apotropaic function? Gravettian Solutrean Magdalenian Löwenmensch figurine, discovered in 1939 HohlensteinStadel (Germany), mammoth ivory, 31,1 x 5,6 x 5,9 cm, c. 35,000 – 40’000 BCE / Museum Ulm Restoration of the Löwenmensch in 2013 © State Office for Cultural Heritage Baden-Württemberg and Ulmer Museum; Drawing by Christina von Elm. Venus of Dolní Věstonice, ceramic, c. 29,000–25,000 BCE / Moravské zemské muzeum, Brno Venus of Willendorf, limestone, c. 28,000– 25,000 BCE / Naturhistorisches Museum, Vienna Venus of Lespugue, ivory, c. 26,000–24,000 BCE / Musée de l’Homme, Paris Venus of Willendorf, limestone, c. 28,000–25,000 BCE / Naturhistorisches Museum, Vienna 11,1 cm Dame de Brassempouy (France) 3,6 x 1,9 x 2,2 cm, mammoth ivory, c. 26,000 – 24,000 BCE / Musée d’archéologie nationale, SaintGermain-en-Laye, discovered in 1894 Nude figure, Egypt (?), 11 x 4,8 cm, 5th century CE / Walters Art Museum, Baltimore Fragment of a female figure (with a belt?), from the site of Brassempouy, c. 26,000 – 24,000 BCE / Musée d’archéologie nationale, Saint- Germain-en-Laye Swimming reindeer, carving from mammoth tusk, Montastruc (France), c. 11,000–12,000 BCE / British Museum, London Venus of Lespugue, ivory, c. 26,000– 24,000 BCE / Musée de l’Homme, Paris Louise Bourgeois. Harmless Woman, 1969 (private collection) Yves Klein, Anthropométrie de l’époque Bleue (ANT 82), 1960 Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris Bull, Lascaux cave paintings, 18,000– 17,000 BCE, Montignac, France Pablo Picasso, Le taureau (The Bull), state VII, 1945 Museum of Modern Art, New York Bull, Lascaux cave paintings, 18,000– 17,000 BCE, Montignac, France “This borderland between the desert and the mountains is a kind of cultivable fringe of the desert, – a Fertile Crescent […]. It forms roughly a semicircle with the open side toward the south. Its western end is at the southeastern corner of the Mediterranean, the center lies directly north of Arabia, and the eastern end is at the northern end of the Persian Gulf”. James Henry Breasted, Ancient Times: A History of the Early World. An Introduction to the Study and the Career of Early Man, Boston 1916. Çatalhöyük, c. 7,100 BCE Göbekli Tepe, c. 9,900 BCE Jericho, c. 9,600 BCE G̈öbekli Tepe, overhead view and groundplan of the main excavation area / Deutsches Archäologisches Institut Göbekli Tepe, pillar D43 Çatalhöyük archeological site, c. 7,100 BCE Seated woman of Çatalhöyük, clay and ceramic, c. 6,000 BCE / Museum of Anatolian Civilizations, Ankara, Turkey Woman figure from Çatalhöyük, clay and ceramic, c. 6,000 BCE / Museum of Anatolian Civilizations, Ankara, Turkey Deer hunt, detail of a wall painting from level III, Çatalhöyük, Turkey, c. 5750 BCE Tell es-Sultan, archeological site of ancient Jericho Plastered Skull, Tell es-Sultan, Jericho, c. 9000 BCE / Israel Museum, Jerusalem Jericho skulls, human skulls decorated with plaster and shells, found near Jericho (Palestine), c. 8,200–7,500 BCE / British Museum, London, and National Museum, Damascus Stone mask, from Hebron (Israel), c. 7000 BCE Israel Museum, Jerusalem Jericho skull, human skull decorated with plaster and shells, found near Jericho (Palestine), c. 8,200– 7,500 BCE / British Museum, London Stone mask, from Hebron (Israel), c. 7000 BCE / Israel Museum, Jerusalem Plumbed cover of human skull, 5th - 6th dynasty, ca. 2514– 2191 BCE, Giza, Egypt Mummy with an Inserted Panel Portrait of a Youth, 80–100 CE, Fayum, Egypt Metropolitan Museum, New York Statuette of human shape, Ain Ghazal (Jordan), gypsum plaster, bitumen eyelids and pupils, c. 7,000 BCE / Musée du Louvre, Paris