Art(PAL&NEO)

  • Period: 40,000 BCE to 10,000 BCE

    Paleolithic Period

  • 34,000 BCE

    The Sorcerer

    The "Sorcerer" (or Sorcier) in the Trois-Frères cave (c. 13,000 BCE), France, is a 75cm high, partially engraved and painted, hybrid human-animal figure (reindeer antlers, owl face, wolf ears, bear paws, horse tail). It represents a supreme spiritual being a shaman or "master of animals" likely central to hunting rituals or shamanic magic to ensure food supply.
  • 34,000 BCE

    The "Venus" Chauvet Cave, France

    The central element is a prominent female pubic triangle and thighs, a common motif in "Venus" imagery of the time. This is intertwined with the imposing figure of a bison, possibly standing upright (bipedal). As the viewer moves around the natural rock protrusion on which the image is drawn, the composition shifts, revealing the profile of a cave lion as well.
  • 17,000 BCE

    Entryway Intro & the Hall of the Bulls, Caves of Lascaux

    The main point of the Entryway and the Hall of the Bulls (c. 17,000 – 13,000 BCE) at the Caves of Lascaux is to serve as a monumental introduction to Upper Paleolithic artistic and spiritual life, showcasing the earliest examples of sophisticated human symbolic thinking and technical mastery.
  • Period: 10,000 BCE to 3000 BCE

    Neolithic Art Period

  • 9500 BCE

    Gobekli Tepe, Angolia Turkey

    The site features over 200 T-shaped pillars arranged in about 20 circular enclosures. Some of these stone pillars stand nearly 18 feet tall and weigh up to 20 tons.
  • 7500 BCE

    Natufian Cultue, Catalhoyuk

    They were among the first people to live in permanent, semi-subterranean stone houses year-round, subsisting on an abundance of wild grains, nuts, and game in a lush environment.
  • 4000 BCE

    Stonehenge, Salisbury Plain, Southern England

    A "Place for the Dead": Extensive archaeological evidence, including thousands of bone fragments, suggests it served as a major cremation cemetery and a site for ancestor worship. Astronomical Alignment: The monument is precisely aligned with the solar cycle, specifically the summer solstice sunrise and winter solstice sunset.