Archive for the 'The Arts' Category

Prehistoric Wall Paintings In Northern Spain Are 39,000 Thousand Years Old

These are among the earliest known cave paintings produced by humans in Europe. Were the artists modern humans, or were they Neanderthals? Scientists aren’t completely sure…

 

Whomever the artists were, experts have now been forced to rethink their ideas about the people who lived (and made cave paintings) in the early Upper Palaeolithic – it seems that complex and figurative art was well established much earlier than previously thought.

 

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Cave Paintings Among the Oldest in Europe

 

(Popular Archaeology)

 

A team of scientists from the Universities of Cantabria and Burgos in Spain and Toulouse in France have dated prehistoric wall paintings in the Altxerri cave system in the Gipuzkoa province of northern Spain to about 39,000 years BPE, making them among the earliest known cave paintings produced by humans in Europe.

 

It was in 2011 when Cantabria University members Aitor Ruiz and César González began to explore the upper gallery of the cave, designated Altxerri B, with the objective of coming up with some reliable dates for the less-explored wall paintings in this part of the cave system. These paintings appeared to have been done independently of other paintings found in a lower gallery, paintings already with known dates that fell within the 29,000 – 35,000 BPE range. The paintings in this upper gallery were figurative representations of a bison (the most common element among the Altxerri cave system paintings) a feline, a possible animal’s head, a bear and two groups of three finger marks, as well as other motifs. Ruiz and González also employed the help of Diego Garate, a specialist in Upper Paleolithic cave art from the University of Toulouse, to help them place and interpret the paintings and their findings within the context of current knowledge about Paleolithic art in Europe…

 

For the complete piece click here to go to Popular Archaeology.

 

 

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America’s Oldest Petroglyphs Found In Nevada

We know next to nothing about the first people to cross the Bering Strait into the Americas – but we now have some of their very, very ancient art:

 

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Oldest petroglyphs on continent found in Nevada

Associated Press

 

Pyramid Lake, Nev. —

 

“Ancient rock etchings along a dried-up lake bed in Nevada have been confirmed to be the oldest recorded petroglyphs in North America, dating back at least 10,000 years.

 

The petroglyphs found on limestone boulders near Pyramid Lake in northern Nevada’s high desert are similar in design to etchings found at a lake in Oregon that are believed to be at least 7,600 years old. Unlike later drawings that sometimes depict a spear or antelope, the carvings are abstract with tightly clustered geometric designs – some are diamond patterns, others have short parallel lines on top of a longer line.

 

Scientists can’t tell for sure who carved them, but they were found on the Pyramid Lake Paiute Tribe’s reservation land.

 

“We initially thought people 12,000 or 10,000 years ago were primitive, but their artistic expressions and technological expertise associated with these paints a much different picture,” said Eugene Hattori, the curator of anthropology at the Nevada State Museum in Carson City who co-authored a paper on the findings earlier this month in the Journal of Archaeological Science…”

 

For the complete article click here to go to SFGate.

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The Jeweled Saint Skeletons

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Ornamented relics were reminders to the faithful of heavenly treasures to come…

 

Enjoy a photographic series of the “Dazzling Jeweled ‘Saint’ Skeletons” from the catacombs of Rome, here.

 

And for an extra treat, here is a video interview with a scholar (and author/artist) who is truly attuned to the beauty of death:

 

The Empire Of Death – Art In Human Bone

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