forms in the natural environment to the representation (literally, the
presenting again—in different and substitute form—of something
observed) of humans and animals. The immensity of this achieve-
ment cannot be exaggerated.
Africa
Some of the earliest paintings yet discovered come from Africa, and,
like the treasured pebble in the form of a face found at Makapansgat,
the oldest African paintings were portable objects.
APOLLO 11 CAVEBetween 1969 and 1972, scientists working
in the Apollo 11 Cave in Namibia (MAP15-1) found seven fragments
of stone plaques with paint on them, including four or five recogniz-
able images of animals. In most cases, including the example illus-
trated here (FIG. 1-3), the species is uncertain, but the forms are al-
ways carefully rendered. One plaque depicts a striped beast, possibly
a zebra. The charcoal from the archaeological layer in which the
Namibian plaques were found has been dated to around 23,000 BCE.
Like every artist in every age in every medium, the painter of the
Apollo 11 plaque had to answer two questions before beginning work:
What shall be my subject? How shall I represent it? In Paleolithic art,
the almost universal answer to the first question was an animal—bison,
mammoth, ibex, and horse were most common. In fact, Paleolithic
painters and sculptors depicted humans infrequently and men almost
never. In equally stark contrast to today’s world, there was also agree-
ment on the best answer to the second question. Artists presented vir-
tually every animal in every Paleolithic,Mesolithic (Middle Stone Age),
and Neolithic (New Stone Age) painting in the same manner—in strict
profile. The profile is the only view of an animal wherein the head,
body, tail, and all four legs can be seen. A frontal view would have con-
cealed most of the body, and a three-quarter view would not have
shown either the front or side fully. Only the profile view is completely
informative about the animal’s shape, and this is why the Stone Age
painter chose it. A very long time passed before artists placed any pre-
mium on “variety” or “originality,” either in subject choice or in repre-
sentational manner. These are quite modern notions in the history of
art. The aim of the earliest painters was to create a convincing image of
the subject, a kind of pictorial definition of the animal capturing its
very essence, and only the profile view met their needs.
Western Europe
Even older than the Namibian painted plaques are some of the first
sculptures and paintings of western Europe (MAP1-1), although ex-
amples of still greater antiquity may yet be found in Africa, bridging
the gap between the Makapansgat pebble and the Apollo 11 painted
plaques.
16 Chapter 1 ART BEFORE HISTORY
1-2Waterworn pebble resembling a human face, from Makapansgat,
South Africa, ca. 3,000,000 BCE. Reddish-brown jasperite, 2^3 – 8 wide.
Three million years ago someone recognized a face in this pebble and
brought it to a rock shelter for safekeeping, but the stone is not an
artwork because it was neither manufactured nor modified.
1-3Animal facing left, from the Apollo 11 Cave, Namibia, ca. 23,000 BCE.
Charcoal on stone, 5 4 –^14 . State Museum of Namibia, Windhoek.
Like most other paintings for thousands of years, this very early
example from Africa represents an animal in strict profile so that the
head, body, tail, and all four legs are clearly visible.
MAP1-1Prehistoric sites in Europe.
Newgrange
Skara Brae
Stonehenge
La Madeleine
La Magdelaine
Laussel Lascaux
Brassempouy
Pech-Merle
Vallon-
Altamira Pont-d’Arc
Le Tuc d’Audoubert
Hohlenstein-
Stadel Willendorf
ATLANTIC
OCEAN
ATLANTIC
OCEAN
North
Sea
North
Sea
Mediterranean SeaMediterranean Sea
ENGLAND
IRELAND
GERMANY
AUSTRIA
ITALY
MALTA
FRANCE
SPAIN
AFRICA
0 250 500 miles
2500 500 kilometers
1 in.
1 in.