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tHe BirtH of figurAtion
W
here does figuration come from?
Homo sapiens
is in effect the only one
in the evolutionary line of humans that feels the need to “represent”, that
is, to depict something that no longer exists, that is absent. However, the
appearance of lines with no practical utility dates to long before that. As
far back as
500,000 years ago, in trinil on the island of Java, a male or female
Homo erectus
carefully etched a zigzag line on a shell valve. Around 50,000 years ago, neander-
thal man, who evolved 300,000 years ago from the African
Erectus
who
migrated to
europe, left perpendicular lines etched on the walls of gorham’s Cave in gilbraltar.
more or less at the same time, slightly further north, abstract motifs were painted
with red ochre on the walls of spanish caves in la Pasiega, maltravieso, Ardales and
perhaps el Castillo, as well as in the prehistoric cave
des Merveilles
in rocamadour,
france. the neanderthal were also the first to adorn themselves with pendants or
necklaces of perforated teeth and to bury their dead.
meanwhile, the
Erectus
who remained in Africa
had continued to evolve, leading to
the modern
Homo sapiens
between 300,000 and 200,000 years ago. About 80,0000
years ago,
Sapiens
traced perpendicular lines on small blocks of red ochre, found
in Blombos Cave in south Africa. it would be another 40,0000 years, however – the
time required for their mental faculties to become more complex – before men cre-
ated the first figurative representations. this was accomplished at the two extremes
of eurasia – in Western europe on one end and indonesia on the other. the most
ancient paintings of all were found in indonesia, with depictions of animals – a pig-
deer and local non-ruminants – and hands printed on the walls. the theme of the
hand, in
both positive and negative, would be found later in all areas of the world.
no doubt, this represented a way for human beings to leave their trace, using a part
of themselves from which they were able to take some distance.
WoMen and aniMalS
in Western europe, figurative art makes its first appearance in Chauvet Cave in
france and the caves of the swabian Jura, such as Hohle fels and Hohlenstein in
germany, in the form of stone or ivory sculptures depicting
animals or in some cases
female figures. Chauvet Cave harbours four hundred painted animals and only one
human figure, represented by a pubic triangle with the head of a bison. for 30,000
years, animals and naked women with exaggerated sexual attributes would continue
Seated feMale figure
WitH croSSed legS
Cyclades, said to be from Amorgos
Late
Neolithic period
(V–IV millennia BC)
Musées Royaux d’Art et d’Histoire,
Brussels, inv. A.3029
(cat. 9, detail)
33
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to be the preferred subjects of prehistoric art; tens of thousands of animal depictions
have been found and hundreds of women (versus the extremely rare representations
of men).
What is the motive for these representations? on the one hand, Paleolithic hunt-
er-gatherers, whose minds were almost identical to ours, considered themselves an
animal species like the others and certainly not the most dangerous. Consequently,
they maintained
a close bond with animals, as do many traditional populations that
practice totemism, believing that each clan descends from a mythic ancestor with
an animal nature.
furthermore,
Sapiens
were the first and only species of primates (or mammals)
with a continuous sexuality, uninterrupted by regular intervals of infertility. this
resulted in a state of permanent social tension, as testified
in ancient texts such as
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