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Palaeolithic Art and Archaeology: The Mobiliary Evidence

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 February 2014

Ann Sieveking
Affiliation:
Church Cottage, Darsham, Saxmundham, Suffolk IP17 3PXand University College London, University of London Institute of Archaeology, 31–34 Gordon Square, London WC1H OPY

Extract

Art is unique amongst the categories of evidence which survive from the Palaeolithic period in that it was originally structured to communicate. It is true that style is an aspect of tool-making, and the particular forms adopted in the manufacture of tools may be intended as practical innovations or as recognizable types that define distinct social groups (Wiessner 1983) but art is only communication; it has no practical use. Its purpose is to convey a message, simple perhaps, as with ornamentation, or more complex as is suggested by the repertoire of painting and engraving in caves. In a culture without a literate tradition music, mime, recital and art are the vehicles of information. Only one of these remains from the Palaeolithic and, in isolation, the visual evidence is to a certain degree illuminating and to a certain degree frustrating in that certain deductions can be made from its intrinsic features, but not an explanation of its meaning.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 1991

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References

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