Paleolithic & Neolithic Art

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  • Опубліковано 2 лип 2024
  • For the first section of study for this course, you are going to be introduced to the beginnings of art and you will begin to tackle some of the bigger questions about why human beings make art and how we perceive those images.
    The first era of art we will be studying is called the Paleolithic Era (literally "New Stone Age") . In this era from around 40,000 BCE to around 12,000 BCE, humans are mostly nomadic hunters and gathers living in the last stages of an ice age. While lives are short and difficult, during this period humans begin to create images of the world around them. Humans now have the ability to make visual copies and interpretations of their surroundings. This seismic change in the way we view our world will forever be altered.
    Around 9,000 BCE, the worse effects of the ice age began to lessen, which led to a warming that raised sea levels and caused the extinction or migration of the main food source animals that kept Paleolithic people alive in Europe.
    During this next phase, the Neolithic (literally "New Stone Age") humans began to settle into organized communities and domesticate plants and animals. Nomadic tribes gave way to Neolithic farming and herding. Permanent communities began to spring up in Anatolia (modern Turkey) and Mesopotamia (modern Iraq). This ability to produce food while remaining settled in one area was a revolution in the history of humanity. It allowed for the proliferation of complex societies with organized governments, religions, and economies. This then led to the eventual creation of large scale structures, sculptures and images on a scale never before seen.
    One of the first cities to appear during the Neolithic period was Jericho along the Jordan river near modern day Jerusalem. The first settlers to the area began building structures around 9000 BCE. The city was already thousands of years old by the time it is mentioned in the Bible. Along with a wall surrounding the city for protection, the inhabitants of Jericho created the first "portraits" of human beings by adding layers of clay to human skulls.
    VOCABULARY LIST
    This is a list of important vocabulary words for. The definition of many of these words can be found in the glossary of your textbook, Gardner's Art through the Ages. Make sure you are familiar with the meaning of all these words by the end of the chapter.
    Paleolithic
    Neolithic
    Perceptual Image
    Conceptual Image
    Representational Image
    Post and Lintel
    Megalith
    Ochre
    Bas relief
    Incised
    Henge
    Megalith
    Post and Lintel
    Corbelling
    Wattle and Daub
    Cantilevered

КОМЕНТАРІ • 16

  • @blue_3dArtist
    @blue_3dArtist 4 місяці тому +1

    Thank you very match 🌟 Your courses and your way of teaching are really helpful for studying for the exam 😄.

  • @prizepig
    @prizepig Рік тому +4

    This was great. Thanks for making it.

  • @zeropointconsciousness
    @zeropointconsciousness Рік тому +2

    I found a macehead I think it is in my local river in Scotland.
    Pity I can't post a picture of it here because it is very esthetically pleasing to the eye.
    A work of art for sure.

  • @leafandmachine
    @leafandmachine Рік тому +1

    Great video! Such a great resource

  • @artworld9799
    @artworld9799 Рік тому +1

    Just amazing! So great work! Regards dear💕💕

  • @WilliamJamesGilbertIIakaJamie
    @WilliamJamesGilbertIIakaJamie 9 місяців тому +1

    GREAT presentation... There is one thought you spoke that I can not wrap my mind around . I say thought as it is what has been taught , someones thought on the subject. Paleolithic people were not just Wander , Hunter , Gathers , Nomads. I live and learn on a community/ tribe home site of paleolithic people that was generations upon generations upon (ect.) of people. I do believe small groups would go out from time to time to follow migrating herds . But in reality lets look at animals that would be harvested because not all animals are migrating animals . We have animals like deer , squirrel, rabbit , grouse , turkey , fish ( non migrating ) . Along with other types of food they knew about . ( Nuts , fruits , grasses and weeds ect.) Im speaking of North America . Which people were here long before weve been taught. If you'd like to see some artifacts , tools / effigies of North America Paleolithic come join me on my channel. Thank you for this video...

  • @usergiodmsilva1983PT
    @usergiodmsilva1983PT 7 місяців тому

    11:53 wow, these are amazing, had never seen these ones before!

  • @mizmizeri1312
    @mizmizeri1312 9 місяців тому

    thank you proffesor neal for teaching me everything i know and helping me pass all my art history exams! 😊 greetings from europe 💫💫💫

  • @alessandrasorrentino3460
    @alessandrasorrentino3460 Рік тому +1

    Amazing! Thanks!

  • @nikitaiv2507
    @nikitaiv2507 2 роки тому +1

    Wow! Thank you so much for such an incredible lecture!

  • @happybergner9832
    @happybergner9832 Рік тому +1

    How do we know that the horn in the relief sculpture, is not a Shofar? Well, she is holding it the wrong way....

  • @pakistangaming4358
    @pakistangaming4358 8 місяців тому

    Thank d
    For your effort

  • @Creating.with.Mohsen
    @Creating.with.Mohsen Рік тому +1

    thank you so much for this lecture series! its truly amazing!
    is it possible that i find the book youre using online?

  • @samuelpope7798
    @samuelpope7798 Рік тому +2

    love the video. I am fascinated by the Venus figures. I am aware of the relatively recent interpretation that posits women as the creators of these. I think that is rather unlikely. I have also heard that they were simply porn. The erotic nature of the figures is offered as "evidence" for that. I would be surprised if the men (assuming male artists) didn't enjoy the figures for their eroticism but that by no means precludes another purpose. They might have been images of what a young bachelor wanted to possess, and by creating an image of same might affect his destiny in the same way the images of the animals influenced the hunt.