History of Art (1 Ancient Art)
History of Art (1 Ancient Art)
History of Art (1 Ancient Art)
Stone Age
Bronze Age
Iron Age
STONE AGE ( c. 30,000 BCE to about 3,000 BCE)
Paleolithic Period or Old Stone Age (c. 30,000 BCE -10,000 BCE)
Mesolithic Period or Middle Stone Age (10,000 BCE- 8,000 BCE)
Neolithic Period or New Stone Age (8,000 BCE- 3,000 BCE)
PALEOLITHIC AGE (C. 30,000 BCE -10,000 BCE)
Lion-Human of Hohlenstein
The Venus of Tan-Tan was found
Stadel (38,000 BC)
during an excavation on the north bank
It was discovered in a cave in
of the River Draa by Lutz Fiedler, state
Hohlenstein Mountain, located in
archeologist of Hessen, Germany
the Swabian Jura of southwest
(200,000-500,000 BC)
Germany.
MESOLITHIC PERIOD (C.10,000-4,000 BCE)
Cave paintings overwhelmingly depicted animals, rock
paintings were usually of human groupings. The painted
humans typically seem to be engaged in either hunting or
rituals.
Far from being realistic, the humans shown in rock painting
are highly stylized, rather like glorified stick figures. These
humans look more like pictographs than pictures, and some
historians feel they represent the primitive beginnings of
writing (i.e.: hieroglyphs).
NEOLITHIC PERIOD (8,000 BCE- 3,000 BCE)
Humans were settling themselves down into agrarian
societies, which left them enough spare time to explore
some key concepts of civilization—namely, religion,
architecture, writing and art.
The "new" arts to emerge from this era were weaving,
architecture, megaliths, and increasingly stylized
pictographs that were well on their way to becoming
writing.
Neolithic art was still created for some functional
purpose. There were more images of humans than
animals, and the humans looked more identifiably
human.
POTTERY
The Bronze age gave way to the Iron age after the serious disruption of the
tin trade: the population migrations of around 1200-1100 BC reduced the
shipping of tin around the Mediterranean and from Britain, limiting supplies
and raising prices.