Cave painting. Primitive art

Man has always been drawn to art. Proof of this is the numerous cave paintings all over the planet, created by our ancestors tens of thousands of years ago. Primitive creativity is evidence that people lived everywhere - from the hot African savannah to the Arctic Circle. America, China, Russia, Europe, Australia – ancient artists left their marks everywhere. One should not think that primitive painting is completely primitive. Among the rock masterpieces, there are also very skillful works that surprise with their beauty and technique, painted with bright colors and carrying deep meaning.

Petroglyphs and rock paintings of ancient people

Cueva de las Manos cave

The cave is located in the south of Argentina. The ancestors of the Indians of Patagonia lived here for a long time. On the walls of the cave, drawings were found depicting a scene of hunting wild animals, as well as many negative images of the hands of teenage boys. Scientists have suggested that drawing the outline of a hand on the wall is part of an initiation rite. In 1999, the cave was included in the UNESCO World Heritage List

Serra da Capivara National Park

After the discovery of many rock art sites, the area, located in the Brazilian state of Piaui, was declared a national park. Even in the days of pre-Columbian America, the Serra da Capivara park was a densely populated area; a large number of communities of the ancestors of modern Indians were concentrated here. The cave paintings, created using charcoal, red hematite and white gypsum, date back to the 12th-9th millennium BC. They belong to the Nordesti culture.


Lascaux Cave

A monument of the Late Paleolithic period, one of the best preserved in Europe. The cave is located in France in the Vézère river valley. In the middle of the 20th century, drawings created 18-15 thousand years ago were discovered in it. They belong to the ancient Solutrean culture. The images are located in several cave halls. The most impressive 5-meter drawings of animals resembling bison are in the “Hall of Bulls”.


Kakadu National Park

The area is located in northern Australia, approximately 170 km from the city of Darwin. Over the past 40 thousand years, Aboriginal people have lived in the territory of the current national park. They left behind interesting examples of primitive painting. These are images of hunting scenes, shamanic rituals and scenes of the creation of the world, made using a special “X-ray” technique.


Nine Mile Canyon

A gorge in the USA in the east of Utah is almost 60 km long. It was even nicknamed the longest art gallery due to a series of rock petroglyphs. Some are created using natural dyes, others are carved directly into the rock. Most of the images were created by the Fremont Indians. In addition to the drawings, cave dwellings, well houses and ancient grain storage facilities are of interest.


Kapova Cave

An archaeological site located in Bashkortostan on the territory of the Shulgan-Tash nature reserve. The length of the cave is more than 3 km, the entrance in the form of an arch is 20 meters high and 40 meters wide. In the 1950s, primitive drawings of the Paleolithic era were discovered in four halls of the grotto - about 200 images of animals, anthropomorphic figures and abstract symbols. Most of them are created using red ocher.


Valley of Miracles

Mercantour National Park, which is called the "Valley of Miracles", is located near the Cote d'Azur. In addition to its natural beauty, tourists are attracted by Mount Bego, a real archaeological site where tens of thousands of ancient paintings from the Bronze Age have been discovered. These are geometric figures of unknown purpose, religious symbols and other mysterious signs.


Altamira Cave

The cave is located in northern Spain in the autonomous community of Cantabria. She became famous for her rock paintings, which were made using polychrome technique using a variety of natural dyes: ocher, hematite, coal. The images belong to the Magdalenian culture, which existed 15-8 thousand years BC. Ancient artists were so skillful that they were able to give images of bison, horses and wild boars a three-dimensional appearance, using the natural irregularities of the wall.


Chauvet Cave

A historical monument of France, located in the Ardèche River valley. About 40 thousand years ago, the cave was inhabited by ancient people, who left behind more than 400 drawings. The oldest images are over 35 thousand years old. The paintings were perfectly preserved due to the fact that for a long time they could not reach Chauvet; they were discovered only in the 1990s. Unfortunately, tourist access to the cave is prohibited.


Tadrart-Akakus

Once upon a time, in the hot and practically barren Sahara there was a fertile and green area. There is a lot of evidence of this, including rock paintings discovered in Libya on the territory of the Tadrart-Akakus mountain range. Using these images, you can study the evolution of climate in this part of Africa, and trace the transformation of a flowering valley into a desert.


Wadi Methandush

Another masterpiece of rock art in Libya, located in the southwest of the country. The paintings of Wadi Methandush depict scenes with animals: elephants, cats, giraffes, crocodiles, bulls, antelopes. It is believed that the most ancient ones were created 12 thousand years ago. The most famous painting and unofficial symbol of the area is of two large cats engaged in a duel.


Laas Gaal

A cave complex in the unrecognized state of Somaliland with perfectly preserved ancient drawings. These paintings are considered the best surviving of all on the African continent, they date back to 9-3 millennia BC. Basically, they are dedicated to the sacred cow - a cult animal that was worshiped in these places. The images were discovered in the early 2000s by a French expedition.


Bhimbetka cliff dwellings

Located in India, in the state of Madhya Pradesh. It is believed that the direct ancestors of modern humans also lived in the Bhimbetka cave complex. The drawings discovered by Indian archaeologists date back to the Mesolithic era. Interestingly, many of the rituals of the inhabitants of the surrounding villages are similar to the scenes depicted by ancient people. There are about 700 caves in Bhimbetka, of which more than 300 are well studied.


White Sea petroglyphs

The drawings of primitive people are located on the territory of the White Sea Petroglyphs archaeological complex, which includes several dozen sites of ancient people. The images are located in a place called Zalavruga on the shores of the White Sea. In total, the collection consists of 2,000 grouped illustrations depicting people, animals, battles, rituals, hunting scenes, and there is also an interesting picture of a man on skis.


Petroglyphs of Tassil-Adjer

A mountain plateau in Algeria, on the territory of which the largest drawings of ancient people discovered in northern Africa are located. Petroglyphs began to appear here from the 7th millennium BC. The main plot is hunting scenes and figures of animals of the African savannah. The illustrations are made in different techniques, which indicates that they belong to different historical eras.


Tsodilo

The Tsodilo mountain range is located in the Kalahari Desert in Botswana. Here, over an area of ​​more than 10 km², thousands of images created by ancient people were discovered. The researchers claim that they cover a time period of 100 thousand years. The most ancient creations are primitive contour images, while later ones represent an attempt by artists to give the drawings a three-dimensional effect.


Tomsk writing

A natural museum-reserve in the Kemerovo region, created in the late 1980s with the aim of preserving rock art. On its territory there are about 300 images, many of them created approximately 4 thousand years ago. The earliest date back to the 10th century BC. In addition to the creativity of the ancient man, tourists will be interested in seeing the ethnographic exhibition and museum collections that are part of the Tomsk Pisanitsa.


Magura Cave

The natural site is located in northwestern Bulgaria near the city of Belogradchik. During archaeological excavations in the 1920s, the first evidence of the presence of ancient man was found here: tools, ceramics, jewelry. More than 700 examples of rock paintings, presumably created 100-40 thousand years ago, were also discovered. In addition to figures of animals and people, they depict stars and the sun.


Gobustan Nature Reserve

The protected area includes mud volcanoes and ancient rock art. More than 6 thousand images were created by people who lived on this land from the primitive era to the Middle Ages. The subjects are quite simple - scenes of hunting, religious rituals, figures of people and animals. Gobustan is located in Azerbaijan, approximately 50 km from Baku.


Onega petroglyphs

Petroglyphs were discovered on the eastern shore of Lake Onega in the Pudozh region of Karelia. Drawings dating back to 4-3 millennia BC are placed on the rocks of several capes. Some illustrations are quite impressive 4 meters in size. In addition to standard images of people and animals, there are also mystical symbols of unknown purpose, which always frightened the monks of the nearby Murom Holy Dormition Monastery.


Rock reliefs at Tanum

A group of petroglyphs discovered in the 1970s on the territory of the Swedish commune of Tanum. They are located along a 25-kilometer line that is believed to have been the shore of a fjord in the Bronze Age. In total, archaeologists discovered approximately 3 thousand drawings, collected in groups. Unfortunately, under the influence of unfavorable natural conditions, petroglyphs are in danger of extinction. Gradually it becomes more and more difficult to distinguish their outlines.


Rock paintings in Alta

Primitive people lived not only in a comfortable warm climate, but also near the Arctic Circle. In the 1970s, in northern Norway near the city of Alta, scientists discovered a large group of prehistoric drawings, consisting of 5 thousand fragments. These paintings depict human life in harsh weather conditions. Some illustrations contain ornaments and signs that scientists have not been able to decipher.


Coa Valley Archaeological Park

An archaeological complex created at the site of the discovery of prehistoric paintings that date back to the Paleolithic and Neolithic periods (the so-called Solutrean culture). There are not only ancient images here, some elements were created in the Middle Ages. The drawings are located on rocks stretching for 17 km along the Koa River. There is also a Museum of Art and Archeology in the park, dedicated to the history of the area.


Newspaper Rock

Translated, the name of the archaeological site means “Newspaper Stone”. Indeed, the petroglyphs covering the rock resemble a characteristic typographical seal. The mountain is located in the American state of Utah. It has not been established for certain when these signs were created. It is believed that the Indians applied them to the cliff both before the European conquerors arrived on the continent and after that.


Edakkal Caves

One of the archaeological treasures of India and all humanity is the Edakkal caves in the state of Kerala. During the Neolithic era, prehistoric petroglyphs were painted on the walls of the grottoes. These characters have not yet been deciphered. The area is a popular tourist attraction; visiting the caves is only possible as part of an excursion. Self-entrance is prohibited.


Petroglyphs of the archaeological landscape of Tamgaly

The Tamgaly tract is located approximately 170 km from Almaty. In the 1950s, about 2 thousand rock paintings were discovered on its territory. Most of the images were created in the Bronze Age, but there are also modern creations that appeared in the Middle Ages. Based on the nature of the drawings, scientists have suggested that an ancient sanctuary was located in Tamgaly.


Petroglyphs of the Mongolian Altai

The complex of rock signs, located in Northern Mongolia, covers an area of ​​25 km² and stretches 40 km in length. The images were created in the Neolithic era more than 3 thousand years ago, there are drawings even older, 5 thousand years old. Most of them depict deer with chariots; there are also figures of hunters and fairy-tale animals reminiscent of dragons.


Rock art in Hua Mountains

Chinese rock art was discovered in the south of the country in the Hua Mountains. They represent figures of people, animals, ships, celestial bodies, weapons, painted in rich ocher. In total there are about 2 thousand images, which are divided into 100 groups. Some pictures develop into full-fledged scenes, where you can see a solemn ceremony, ritual or procession.


Cave of Swimmers

The grotto is located in the Libyan Desert on the border of Egypt and Libya. In the 1990s, ancient petroglyphs were discovered there, their age exceeding 10 thousand years (Neolithic era). They depict people swimming in the sea or other body of water. That is why the cave was named by its modern name. After people began to visit the grotto en masse, many of the drawings began to deteriorate.


Horseshoe Canyon

The gorge is part of Canyonlands National Park, which is located in the US state of Utah. Horseshoe Canyon became famous because ancient paintings created by nomadic hunter-gatherers were discovered there in the 1970s. The images are depicted on panels about 5 meters high and 60 meters wide, they represent 2-meter humanoid figures.


Petroglyphs of Val Camonica

In the first half of the 20th century, in the Italian Val Camonica valley (Lombardy region), the largest collection of rock art in the world was discovered - more than 300 thousand drawings. Most of them were created in the Iron Age, the latest ones belong to the Camun culture, which is written about in ancient Roman sources. It is curious that when B. Mussolini was in power in Italy, these petroglyphs were considered evidence of the emergence of the superior Aryan race.


Twyfelfontein Valley

The most ancient settlements appeared in the Namibian Twyfelfontein Valley more than 5 thousand years ago. Around this time, rock paintings were created depicting the typical life of hunters and nomads. In total, scientists counted more than 2.5 thousand fragments, most of them are about 3 thousand years old, the youngest are about 500 years old. In the middle of the 20th century, someone stole an impressive part of the slabs with petroglyphs.


Chumash Painted Cave

A national park in California, on the territory of which there is a small sandstone grotto with wall paintings of the Chumash Indians. The subjects of the paintings reflect the ideas of the aborigines about the world order. According to various estimates, the paintings were created between 1 thousand and 200 years ago, which makes them quite modern compared to prehistoric cave paintings elsewhere in the world.


Petroglyphs of Toro Muerto

A group of petroglyphs in the Peruvian province of Castilla, which were created in the 6th-12th centuries during the Huari culture. Some scientists suggest that the Incas had a hand in them. The drawings depict animals, birds, celestial bodies, geometric patterns, as well as people dancing, probably performing some kind of ritual. In total, about 3 thousand painted stones of volcanic origin were discovered.


Petroglyphs of Easter Island

One of the most mysterious places on the planet, Easter Island, can surprise not only with its giant stone heads. Ancient petroglyphs painted on rocks, boulders, and cave walls are of no less interest and are considered an important archaeological heritage. They are either schematic images of a technical process, or non-existent animals and plants - scientists have yet to understand this issue.


primitive art

Any person endowed with a great gift - feel the beauty the surrounding world, feel harmony lines, admire the variety of shades of colors.

Painting- this is the artist’s perception of the world captured on canvas. If your perception of the world around you is reflected in the artist’s paintings, then you feel a kinship with the works of this master.

The paintings attract attention, fascinate, excite imagination and dreams, evoke memories of pleasant moments, favorite places and landscapes.

When did they appear first images created by man?

Appeal primitive people to a new type of activity for them - art - one of the greatest events in human history. Primitive art reflected man’s first ideas about the world around him; thanks to it, knowledge and skills were preserved and passed on, and people communicated with each other. In the spiritual culture of the primitive world, art began to play the same universal role that a pointed stone played in labor activity.


What gave a person the idea to depict certain objects? Who knows whether body painting was the first step towards creating images, or whether a person guessed the familiar silhouette of an animal in a random outline of a stone and, by cutting it, gave it a greater resemblance? Or maybe the shadow of an animal or a person served as the basis for the drawing, and the imprint of a hand or a step precedes the sculpture? There is no definite answer to these questions. Ancient people could come up with the idea of ​​depicting objects not in one, but in many ways.
For example, to the number the most ancient images on the walls of Paleolithic caves include human hand prints, and a random interweaving of wavy lines pressed into the damp clay by the fingers of the same hand.

Works of art from the Early Stone Age, or Paleolithic, are characterized by simplicity of shapes and colors. Rock paintings are usually the outlines of animal figures, made with bright paint - red or yellow, and occasionally - filled with round spots or completely painted over. Such ""paintings"" were clearly visible in the twilight of the caves, illuminated only by torches or the fire of a smoky fire.

In the initial stage of development primitive art didn't know laws of space and perspective, as well as composition, those. intentional distribution of individual figures on a plane, between which there is necessarily a semantic connection.

In living and expressive images stands before us history of the life of primitive man the Stone Age era, told by himself in rock paintings.

Dance. Lleid painting. Spain. With a variety of movements and gestures, a person conveyed his impressions of the world around him, reflecting in them his own feelings, mood and state of mind. Crazy jumping, imitation of animal habits, stamping feet, expressive hand gesturescreated the preconditions for the emergence of dance. There were also war dances associated with magical rituals and the belief in victory over the enemy.

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Composition in the Lascaux cave. France. On the walls of the caves you can see mammoths, wild horses, rhinoceroses, and bison. For primitive man, drawing was the same “witchcraft” as spells and ritual dances. By “conjuring” the spirit of a drawn animal by singing and dancing, and then “killing” it, a person seemed to master the power of the animal and “defeat” it before hunting.

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And these are petroglyphs. Hawaii

Murals on the Tassili-Ajer mountain plateau. Algeria.

Primitive people practiced sympathetic magic - in the form of dancing, singing or painting animals on the walls of caves - to attract herds of animals and ensure the continuation of the race and the safety of livestock. Hunters acted out scenes of a successful hunt to attract energy into the real world. They turned to the Mistress of the Herds, and later to the Horned God, who was depicted with the antlers of goats or deer to emphasize his primacy over the herds. The bones of animals were supposed to be buried in the ground so that animals, like people, were reborn from the womb of Mother Earth.

This is a cave painting in the Lascaux region of France from the Paleolithic era.

Large animals were the preferred food. And Paleolithic people, skilled hunters, destroyed most of them. And not just large herbivores. During the Paleolithic, cave bears completely disappeared as a species.

There is another type of rock paintings, which has a mystical, mysterious character.

Rock paintings from Australia. Either people, or animals, or maybe both...

Drawings from West Arnhem, Australia.


Huge figures and small people next to them. And in the lower left corner there is something incomprehensible.


Here is a masterpiece from Lascaux, France.


North Africa, Sahara. Tassili. 6 thousand years BC Flying saucers and someone in a spacesuit. Or maybe it's not a spacesuit.


Rock art from Australia...

Val Camonica, Italy.

and the next photo is from Azerbaijan, Gobustan region

Gobustan is included in the UNESCO heritage list

Who were those “artists” who were able to convey the message of their time to distant eras? What prompted them to do this? What were the hidden springs and driving motives that guided them?.. Thousands of questions and very few answers... Many of our contemporaries love it when they are asked to look at history through a magnifying glass.

But is everything really so small in it?

After all, there were images of gods

In the north of Upper Egypt is the ancient temple city of Abydos. Its origin dates back to prehistoric times. It is known that already in the era of the Old Kingdom (about 2500 BC) in Abydos, the universal deity Osiris enjoyed widespread veneration. Osiris was considered a divine teacher who gave the people of the Stone Age a variety of knowledge and crafts, and, quite possibly, knowledge about the secrets of the sky. By the way, it was in Abydos that the oldest calendar was found, dating back to the 4th millennium BC. e.

Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome also left a lot of rock evidence reminding us of their existence. They already had a developed written language - their drawings are much more interesting, from the point of view of studying everyday life, than ancient graffiti.

Why is humanity trying to find out what happened millions of years ago, what knowledge did ancient civilizations have? We look for the source because we think that by revealing it, we will find out why we exist. Humanity wants to find where the starting point is, from which it all began, because it thinks that there, apparently, there is an answer, “what is all this for,” and what will happen in the end...

After all, the world is so vast, and the human brain is narrow and limited. The most complex crossword puzzle of history must be solved gradually, cell by cell...


The discovery of an ancient rock painting in a cave in Gibraltar, which scientists believe was made by Neanderthals about 39,000 years ago, has become a sensation in the scientific world. If the discovery turns out to be true, then history will have to be rewritten, because it turns out that Neanderthals were not at all primitively stupid savages, as is commonly believed today. In our review of ten unique rock paintings that were found at different times and created a real sensation in the world of science.

1. White Shaman's Rock


This 4,000-year-old ancient rock art is located in the lower Peco River in Texas. The giant image (3.5 m) shows the central figure surrounded by other people performing some kind of rituals. It is assumed that the figure of a shaman is depicted in the center, and the picture itself depicts the cult of some forgotten ancient religion.

2. Kakadu Park


Kakadu National Park is one of the most beautiful tourist destinations in Australia. It is especially valued for its rich cultural heritage - the park contains an impressive collection of local Aboriginal art. Some of the rock art at Kakadu (which has been designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site) is almost 20,000 years old.

3. Chauvet Cave


Another UNESCO World Heritage Site is located in the south of France. More than 1000 different images can be found in the Chauvet Cave, most of them are animals and anthropomorphic figures. These are some of the oldest images known to man: their age dates back to 30,000 - 32,000 years. About 20,000 years ago, the cave was filled with stones and has remained in excellent condition to this day.

4. Cueva de El Castillo


In Spain, the “Castle Cave” or Cueva de El Castillo was recently discovered, on the walls of which the oldest cave paintings in Europe were found, their age is 4,000 years older than all the rock paintings that were previously found in the Old World. Most of the images feature handprints and simple geometric shapes, although there are also images of strange animals. One of the drawings, a simple red disk, was made 40,800 years ago. It is assumed that these paintings were made by Neanderthals.

5. Laas Gaal


Some of the oldest and best-preserved rock paintings on the African continent can be found in Somalia, at the Laas Gaal (Camel Well) cave complex. Despite the fact that their age is “only” 5,000 – 12,000 years, these rock paintings are perfectly preserved. They depict mainly animals and people in ceremonial clothing and various decorations. Unfortunately, this wonderful cultural site cannot receive World Heritage status because it is located in an area constantly at war.

6. Bhimbetka Cliff Dwellings


The cliff dwellings at Bhimbetka represent some of the earliest traces of human life on the Indian subcontinent. In natural rock shelters on the walls there are drawings that are about 30,000 years old. These paintings represent the period of development of civilization from the Mesolithic to the end of prehistoric times. The paintings depict animals and people engaged in daily activities such as hunting, religious ceremonies and, interestingly, dancing.

7. Magura


In Bulgaria, the rock paintings found in the Magura cave are not very old - they are between 4,000 and 8,000 years old. They are interesting because of the material that was used to apply the images - bat guano (droppings). In addition, the cave itself was formed millions of years ago and other archaeological artifacts have been found in it, such as the bones of extinct animals (for example, the cave bear).

8. Cueva de las Manos


The "Cave of Hands" in Argentina is famous for its extensive collection of prints and images of human hands. This rock painting dates back to 9,000 - 13,000 years. The cave itself (more precisely, the cave system) was used by ancient people 1,500 years ago. Also in Cueva de las Manos you can find various geometric shapes and images of hunting.

9. Altamira Cave

The paintings found in the Altamira Cave in Spain are considered masterpieces of ancient culture. The stone paintings from the Upper Paleolithic period (14,000 – 20,000 years old) are in exceptional condition. As in Chauvet Cave, a collapse tightly sealed the entrance to this cave about 13,000 years ago, so the images remained in their original form. In fact, these drawings are so well preserved that when they were first discovered in the 19th century, scientists thought they were fakes. It took a long time until technology made it possible to confirm the authenticity of rock art. Since then, the cave has proven so popular with tourists that it had to be closed in the late 1970s because large amounts of carbon dioxide from visitors' breath began to destroy the paintings.

10. Lascaux Cave


It is by far the best known and most significant collection of rock art in the world. Some of the most beautiful 17,000-year-old paintings in the world can be found in this cave system in France. They are very complex, very carefully made and at the same time perfectly preserved. Unfortunately, the cave was closed more than 50 years ago due to the fact that, under the influence of carbon dioxide exhaled by visitors, the unique images began to collapse. In 1983, a reproduction of part of the cave called Lascaux 2 was discovered.

Of great interest are also. They will be of interest not only to professional historians and art critics, but also to anyone interested in history.

Completed by Olga Sergeeva, an 11th grade student at the Kuvakinskaya Secondary School. The oldest surviving works of art were created in the primitive era, about sixty thousand years ago. Primitive (or, in other words, primitive) art geographically covers all continents except Antarctica, and in time - the entire era of human existence, preserved by some peoples living in remote corners of the planet to this day. The conversion of primitive people to a new type of activity for them - art - is one of the greatest events in the history of mankind. Primitive art reflected man’s first ideas about the world around him; thanks to it, knowledge and skills were preserved and passed on, and people communicated with each other. In the spiritual culture of the primitive world, art began to play the same universal role that a pointed stone played in labor activity. What gave a person the idea to depict certain objects? Who knows whether body painting was the first step towards creating images, or whether a person guessed the familiar silhouette of an animal in a random outline of a stone and, by cutting it, gave it a greater resemblance? Or maybe the shadow of an animal or a person served as the basis for the drawing, and the imprint of a hand or a step precedes the sculpture? There is no definite answer to these questions. Ancient people could come up with the idea of ​​depicting objects not in one, but in many ways. Until recently, scientists adhered to two opposing views on the history of primitive art. Some experts considered cave naturalistic painting and sculpture to be the most ancient, while others considered schematic signs and geometric figures. Now most researchers express the opinion that both forms appeared at approximately the same time. For example, among the most ancient images on the walls of caves of the Paleolithic era are imprints of a person’s hand, and random interweaving of wavy lines pressed into damp clay by the fingers of the same hand. The Stone Age is the oldest period in human history (began over 2 million years ago, lasted until the 6th millennium BC), when tools and weapons were made of stone (hence the name of the era - Stone Age) is divided into; GENERALIZED IMAGE OF A WOMAN – MOTHER, SYMBOL OF FERTILITY AND KEEPER OF THE HEARTH. In addition to women, animals were depicted: horses, goats, reindeer, etc. At that time, people did not yet know metal and almost all Paleolithic sculpture was made of stone or bone. VARIOUS PRIMITIVE RITUALS. . Primitive ritual of fertility Ritual of magic blessing in practicing magic PRIMITIVE RITUAL... A mysterious ritual among primitive man.. Secrets of the ritual Practicing magic... Collective performance of a ritual Burial ritual...... Art of the Mesolithic era During the Mesolithic era, or the Middle Stone Age (XII-VIII millennium BC), the climatic conditions on the planet changed. Some animals that were hunted have disappeared; they were replaced by others. Fishing began to develop. People created new types of tools, weapons (bows and arrows), and tamed the dog. All these changes certainly had an impact on the consciousness of primitive man, which was reflected in art. During the Mesolithic era, or the Middle Stone Age (XII-VIII millennium BC), the climatic conditions on the planet changed. Some animals that were hunted have disappeared; they were replaced by others. Fishing began to develop. People created new types of tools, weapons (bows and arrows), and tamed the dog. All these changes certainly had an impact on the consciousness of primitive man, which was reflected in art. This is evidenced, for example, by rock paintings in the coastal mountainous regions of Eastern Spain, between the cities of Barcelona and Valencia. The central place in the rock paintings was occupied by hunting scenes, in which hunters and animals are connected by energetically unfolding action. Hearths of civilizations were discovered here. A Mesolithic settlement was found in the Sverdlovsk region. Mesolithic Settlement Neolithic Art The melting of glaciers in the Neolithic, or New Stone Age (5000-3000 BC), set in motion peoples who began to populate new spaces. The intertribal struggle for possession of the most favorable hunting grounds and for the seizure of new lands intensified. In the Neolithic era, man was threatened by the worst of dangers - another man. New settlements arose on islands in river bends, on small hills, i.e. in places protected from sudden attack. Tools Vessel with ornament

Rock painting - images in caves made by people of the Paleolithic era, one of the types of primitive art. Most of these objects were found in Europe, since it was there that ancient people were forced to live in caves and grottoes to escape the cold. But there are also such caves in Asia, for example, Niah Caves in Malaysia.

For many years, modern civilization had no idea about any objects of ancient painting, but in 1879, the Spanish amateur archaeologist Marcelino-Sans de Sautuola, together with his 9-year-old daughter, during a walk, accidentally came across the Altamira cave, the vaults of which were decorated many drawings of ancient people - this unprecedented find greatly shocked the researcher and prompted him to study it closely. A year later, Sautuola, together with his friend Juan Vilanova y Pierre from the University of Madrid, published the results of their research, which dated the execution of the drawings to the Paleolithic era. Many scientists perceived this message extremely ambiguously; Sautuola was accused of falsifying the finds, but later similar caves were discovered in many other parts of the planet.

Rock art has been the object of great interest among scientists around the world since its discovery in the 19th century. The first discoveries were made in Spain, but subsequently cave paintings were discovered in different parts of the world, from Europe and Africa to Malaysia and Australia, as well as in North and South America.

Cave paintings are a source of valuable information for many scientific disciplines related to the study of antiquity - from anthropology to zoology.

It is customary to distinguish between single-color, or monochrome, and multi-color, or polychrome images. Developing over time, by the 12th millennium BC. e. Cave painting began to be carried out taking into account volume, perspective, color and proportion of figures, and took into account movement. Later, cave painting became more stylized.

To create the designs, dyes of various origins were used: mineral (hematite, clay, manganese oxide), animal, vegetable (charcoal). Dyes were mixed, if necessary, with binders such as tree resin or animal fat, and applied directly to the surface with the fingers; Tools were also used, such as hollow tubes through which dyes were applied, as well as reeds and primitive brushes. Sometimes, to achieve greater clarity of the contours, scraping or cutting out the contours of figures on the walls was used.

Since almost no sunlight penetrates into the caves in which most of the cave paintings are located, torches and primitive lamps were used to create the paintings.

Cave painting of the Paleolithic era consisted of lines and was dedicated mainly to animals. Over time, cave painting evolved as primitive communities developed; In the painting of the Mesolithic and Neolithic eras, there are both animals and handprints and images of people, their interactions with animals and with each other, as well as the deities of primitive cults and their rituals. A significant proportion of Neolithic paintings are depictions of ungulates, such as bison, deer, elk and horses, as well as mammoths; a large proportion is also made up of handprints. Animals were often depicted as wounded, with arrows sticking out of them. Later rock paintings also depict domesticated animals and other subjects contemporary to the authors. There are known images of the ships of the seafarers of ancient Phenicia, noticed by the more primitive communities of the Iberian Peninsula.

Cave painting was widely practiced by primitive hunter-gatherer societies who took refuge in or lived near caves. The lifestyle of primitive people changed little over thousands of years, and therefore both the dyes and the subjects of rock paintings practically did not change and were common to populations of people living thousands of kilometers from each other.

However, differences exist between cave paintings from different time periods and regions. Thus, the caves of Europe mainly depict animals, while African cave paintings pay equal attention to both humans and fauna. The technique of creating drawings also underwent certain changes; later painting is often less crude and demonstrates a higher level of cultural development.