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Earliest Art to the Bronze Age Chapter 14

Art Appreciation-Chapter14-Earliest to Bronze Ages

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Page 1: Art Appreciation-Chapter14-Earliest to Bronze Ages

Earliest Art to the Bronze Age

Chapter 14

Page 2: Art Appreciation-Chapter14-Earliest to Bronze Ages

Paleolithic Period

• Two million years ago humans began making crude stone cutting tools

• One million years ago humans began to make more refined tools with cutting edges

• The earliest sophisticated art is dated to 40,000 years ago

Page 3: Art Appreciation-Chapter14-Earliest to Bronze Ages

Copyright ©2011, ©2009 Pearson Prentice Hall Inc.

Hohle Fels Figure. c. 35,000 B.C.E.Height 2-1/2".

Page 4: Art Appreciation-Chapter14-Earliest to Bronze Ages

Hohle Fels

• Oldest surviving carved human figure• Found in southwest Germany in 2008• Found next to a flute in a cave• Just over 2 inches high• Highly exaggerated female characteristics• Where the head should be is a ring to thread

possible to be worn as a necklace• Could be a representation of the Great

Mother

Page 5: Art Appreciation-Chapter14-Earliest to Bronze Ages

Copyright ©2011, ©2009 Pearson Prentice Hall Inc.

Venus of Willendorf. Aurignacian (late Paleolithic). c. 25,000–20,000 B.C.E.

Height 4-1/2".

Page 6: Art Appreciation-Chapter14-Earliest to Bronze Ages

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Engraved Ochre. From Blombos Cave, South Africa. c. 75,000 B.C.E. Length 4".

Page 7: Art Appreciation-Chapter14-Earliest to Bronze Ages

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Earliest Centers of Civilization.

Page 8: Art Appreciation-Chapter14-Earliest to Bronze Ages

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Wall Painting of Animals. Chauvet Cave, Pont d'Arc, France.c. 28,000 B.C.E.

Page 9: Art Appreciation-Chapter14-Earliest to Bronze Ages

Wall Painting of Animals, Chauvet Cave, Pont d’Arc, France

• Painted with charcoal or earthen pigments

• Found in a cave in central France

• Very lifelike animals depicted some of which are now extinct

• Caves of this sort are thought to possibly be places for rituals

Page 10: Art Appreciation-Chapter14-Earliest to Bronze Ages

Copyright ©2011, ©2009 Pearson Prentice Hall Inc.

Deer and Hands. Las Manos Cave, Argentina. c. 15,000 B.C.E.

Page 11: Art Appreciation-Chapter14-Earliest to Bronze Ages

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Murujuga Petroglyphs. Up to 10,000 years old.

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Murujuga Petroglyphs

• Petroglyph- created by scratching or pecking the surface of a stone

• Off the coast of Australia

• Meaning is unclear

• These petroglyphs are in danger due to wearing from whether and economic development

Page 13: Art Appreciation-Chapter14-Earliest to Bronze Ages

Neolithic Period

• Known as the New Stone Age• Appears to have risen in what is now

Iraq between 9000 and 6000 BCE– BCE is before common era– AD is anno domini, in the year of our lord

• Life is changing in this period from nomadic hunter gatherers to a more stable existence that includes farming

Page 14: Art Appreciation-Chapter14-Earliest to Bronze Ages

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Earthenware Beaker. Susa, Iran. c. 4000 B.C.E.Height 11-1/4".

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Earthenware Beaker

• From Susa, Iran

• More abstract than the cave drawings

• Shows animals that are less natural– Long necked birds– Long bodied dogs– Triangular shapes make up the goat

Page 16: Art Appreciation-Chapter14-Earliest to Bronze Ages

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Stonehenge. c. 2000 B.C.E.

Page 17: Art Appreciation-Chapter14-Earliest to Bronze Ages

Stonehenge

• Located in south central England• Built in layers taking over a millennium• The road in aligned to the northernmost

winter moonrise• The stone weigh more than 25 tons each and

were brought from 19 miles away• The use for Stonehenge is a matter of debate

Page 18: Art Appreciation-Chapter14-Earliest to Bronze Ages

Mesopotamia

• Mesopotamia- “the land between the rivers”

• What is now Iraq

• Sumer is considered the first Mesopotamian civilization

• The Sumerians worshipped a hierarchy of nature gods

Page 19: Art Appreciation-Chapter14-Earliest to Bronze Ages

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Ziggurat of Ur-Nammu. Iraq. c. 2100 B.C.E.

Page 20: Art Appreciation-Chapter14-Earliest to Bronze Ages

Lyre

• The bull’s head represents royalty

• Dipicts scenes from the Epic of Gilgamesh

Page 21: Art Appreciation-Chapter14-Earliest to Bronze Ages

Ziggurat Ur-Nammu

• Temples set of huge platforms

• Embodied the idea of the “sacred mountain” that links heaven and earth

• Filled with sun baked bricks and faced with colored glazed bricks

Page 22: Art Appreciation-Chapter14-Earliest to Bronze Ages

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Lyre. Front plaque of reconstructed lyre from "The King's Grave" tomb RT 789. Ur. c. 2650–2550 B.C.E.

Page 23: Art Appreciation-Chapter14-Earliest to Bronze Ages

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Lyre. Soundbox of reconstructed lyre from "The King's Grave" tomb RT 789. Ur. c. 2650–2550 B.C.E.

Page 24: Art Appreciation-Chapter14-Earliest to Bronze Ages

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Head of an Akkadian Ruler. Nineveh. c. 2300–2200 B.C.E.Height 12".

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Head of an Akkadian Ruler

• The region north of Sumer is Akkadia

• Scattered cities were ruled by one king

• This piece potrays one of the kings

• Careully observed naturalism blended with rhythmic pattern and stylization

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Egypt

• Egypt is surrounded by desert allowing the culture to be unaffected by outside influence

Page 27: Art Appreciation-Chapter14-Earliest to Bronze Ages

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The Great Pyramids. Giza, Egypt. Pyramid of Mycerinus, c. 2500 B.C.E.; Pyramid of Chefren, 2650 B.C.E.; Pyramid of Cheops, c. 2570 B.C.E.

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The Great Pyramids

• Burial structures built for kings that were thought to be gods

• Workers cut huge stone blocks, transported them to the site, and stacked them without mortar to form the pyramid

Page 29: Art Appreciation-Chapter14-Earliest to Bronze Ages

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The Ancient Middle East.

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Funerary Temple of Queen Hatshepsut. Deir el-Bahari.c. 1490–1460 B.C.E.

Page 31: Art Appreciation-Chapter14-Earliest to Bronze Ages

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Mask from Mummy Case. Tomb of Tutankhamen. c. 1340 B.C.E.Height 21-1/4".

Page 32: Art Appreciation-Chapter14-Earliest to Bronze Ages

Copyright ©2011, ©2009 Pearson Prentice Hall Inc.

Wall Painting from the Tomb of Nebamun. Thebes, Egypt. c. 1450 B.C.E.