Exploring the creation and purpose of Stone Age cave art, including the possibility of Neanderthals being capable of artistic expression. Examining the techniques used in cave art and the significance of animals in these works. Delving into the symbolism and challenges of studying cave art and its connection to the underworld.
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Quick takeaways
Cave art served multiple purposes, from being viewed from a distance to being hidden in small niches.
Recent discoveries indicate that Neanderthals were capable of creating cave art, challenging previous beliefs about their sophistication compared to modern humans.
Deep dives
The Nature of Cave Art and Its Global Presence
Cave art, found on almost every continent except Antarctica, takes various forms, including engravings, bas-relief sculptures, and painted symbols and figures. While some art is found in rock shelters and open-air sites, caves offer better preservation. The art made in caves served multiple purposes, from being seen from a distance to being hidden in small niches. The Paleolithic period, which spans from two million years ago until around ten thousand years ago, is associated with cave art, with the oldest known piece dating back at least sixty-five thousand years.
Exploring Cave Art in Lasko
Lasko cave in France features spectacular cave art, including images of horses, bulls, wild cattle, and deer. Some paintings are meticulously detailed and meant to impress, with large chamber spaces accommodating potential social groups. The location of the art in the deepest, darkest parts of the caves suggests a desire for secrecy or a toggle between art that was meant to be seen and appreciated and art that was tucked away. Lasko's art demonstrates a mix of realism and symbolism, with some animals following the natural contours of the cave walls.
The Implications of Neanderthal Cave Art
Recent discoveries indicate that Neanderthals were capable of creating cave art. This challenges the misconception that Neanderthals were less sophisticated than modern humans. The dating of certain cave art indicates that Neanderthals were producing symbolic art as early as sixty-five thousand years ago. This undermines earlier beliefs that symbolic behavior originated only with modern humans. The discovery of Neanderthal cave art suggests that the capacity for symbolic expression was present much earlier in human evolution.
Techniques and Significance of Paleolithic Cave Art
Paleolithic cave art involved various techniques and materials, from finger draggings and engravings to more elaborate paintings using mineral pigments mixed with binders. Brushes made of animal hair or pads, as well as stencils, were used for application. The significance of cave art lies in its function as a communal activity, possibly serving purposes such as fertility rituals, creation narratives, or information exchange between smaller hunter-gatherer groups. The art was inseparable from the context of creation and its specific location within caves.
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss ideas about the Stone Age people who created the extraordinary images found in caves around the world, from hand outlines to abstract symbols to the multicoloured paintings of prey animals at Chauvet and, as shown above, at Lascaux. In the 19th Century, it was assumed that only humans could have made these, as Neanderthals would have lacked the skills or imagination, but new tests suggest otherwise. How were the images created, were they meant to be for private viewing or public spaces, and what might their purposes have been? And, if Neanderthals were capable of creative work, in what ways were they different from humans? What might it have been like to experience the paintings, so far from natural light?
With
Alistair Pike
Professor of Archaeological Sciences at the University of Southampton
Chantal Conneller
Senior Lecturer in Early Pre-History at Newcastle University
And
Paul Pettitt
Professor of Palaeolithic Archaeology at Durham University
Producer: Simon Tillotson
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