Art (Pre)History: Ritual, Narrative and Visual Culture in Neolithic and Bronze Age Europe

被引:0
|
作者
John Robb
机构
[1] University of Cambridge,Department of Archaeology
来源
Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory | 2020年 / 27卷
关键词
Neolithic; Bronze Age; Iron Age; Europe; Prehistoric art; Rock art; Cave painting; Megalithic art; Visual culture; Narrative;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Can we reconstruct how prehistoric people perceived things (their “ways of seeing” or visual culture)? This challenge is made more difficult by the traditional disciplinary assumptions built into prehistoric art studies, for instance focusing narrowly upon a single body of art in isolation. This paper proposes an alternative approach, using comparative study to reveal broad regional changes in visual culture. Although prehistoric art specialists rarely work comparatively, art historians are familiar with describing continent-wide general developments in visual culture and placing them in social context (for instance, the traditional broad-brush history from Classical to medieval to Renaissance systems of representation). This paper does the same for Neolithic (6000–2500 BC) vs. Bronze Age (2500–800 BC) and Iron Age (800 BC–Classical) rock and cave art from sites across Europe, uncovering broad patterns of change. The principal pattern is a shift from a Neolithic iconic art which uses heavily encoded imagery, often schematic geometric motifs, to a Bronze/Iron Age narrative art, which increasingly involves imagery of identifiable people, animals and objects. Moreover, there is also an increasing tendency for motifs to be associated in scenes rather than purely accumulative, and with contextual changes in how art is used—a movement from hidden places to more open or accessible places. Underlying all these changes is a shift in how rock and cave art was used, from citations reproducing ritual knowledge to composed arrays telling narratives of personhood.
引用
收藏
页码:454 / 480
页数:26
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Art (Pre)History: Ritual, Narrative and Visual Culture in Neolithic and Bronze Age Europe
    Robb, John
    JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL METHOD AND THEORY, 2020, 27 (03) : 454 - 480
  • [2] NEOLITHIC AND BRONZE-AGE IN EAST EUROPE
    PIGGOTT, S
    ANTIQUITY, 1960, 34 (136) : 285 - 294
  • [3] The Tamed Horse of Neolithic and Early Bronze-Age Europe?
    Hermes, Gertrud
    ANTHROPOS, 1935, 30 (5-6) : 803 - 823
  • [4] COLONIZATION AND CULTURE IN THE NEOLITHIC AND EARLY BRONZE-AGE CYCLADES
    BROODBANK, C
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGY, 1992, 96 (02) : 341 - 341
  • [6] Art history visual culture
    Cherry, D
    ART HISTORY, 2004, 27 (04) : 479 - 493
  • [7] Art History and Visual Culture
    Heo, Hyeong Uk
    REVIEW OF KOREAN STUDIES, 2020, 23 (01): : 279 - 296
  • [8] Sagaholm: north European Bronze Age rock art and burial ritual
    Skoglund, Peter
    ANTIQUITY, 2017, 91 (357) : 818 - 819
  • [9] A genomic history of the North Pontic Region from the Neolithic to the Bronze Age
    Nikitin, Alexey G.
    Lazaridis, Iosif
    Patterson, Nick
    Ivanova, Svitlana
    Videiko, Mykhailo
    Dergachev, Valentin
    Kotova, Nadiia
    Lillie, Malcolm
    Potekhina, Inna
    Krenz-Niedbala, Marta
    Lukasik, Sylwia
    Makhortykh, Serhij
    Renson, Virginie
    Shephard, Henry
    Sirbu, Gennadie
    Svyryd, Sofiia
    Tkachuk, Taras
    Wlodarczak, Piotr
    Callan, Kim
    Curtis, Elizabeth
    Harney, Eadaoin
    Iliev, Lora
    Kearns, Aisling
    Lawson, Ann Marie
    Michel, Megan
    Mah, Matthew
    Micco, Adam
    Oppenheimer, Jonas
    Qiu, Lijun
    Workman, J. Noah
    Zalzala, Fatma
    Mallick, Swapan
    Rohland, Nadin
    Reich, David
    NATURE, 2025, 639 (8053) : 124 - 131
  • [10] Scotland in Ancient Europe: the Neolithic and Early Bronze Age of Scotland in their European Context
    Ritchie, Anna
    ANTIQUARIES JOURNAL, 2006, 86 : 415 - 416