Course Content
What is Prehistoric Art?
When we talk about Prehistoric, we can think of it as the "Old Stone Age," which is also known as "Prehistoric Times." Because this era is before the invention of writing, documentation, and civilisation, it's also known as "Prehistory" which is the more common choice of phrasing within art history (you will hear both variations throughout this course, but rest assured they both refer to the exact same thing). Google defines Prehistory as "Prehistory, also known as pre-literary history, is the period of human history between the use of the first stone tools by hominins c. 3.3 million years ago and the beginning of recorded history with the invention of writing systems." If you look up "art," Google says it's "the expression or application of human creative skill and imagination, typically in a visual form such as painting or sculpture, producing works to be appreciated primarily for their beauty or emotional power." So, when we think of what these people made, such as cave paintings and sculptures, as art, it is safe to call this the earliest form of art. Cave paintings are the most common form of art that people know about from the Paleolithic era. But few people know that they left behind more than just paintings. A lot of art that dates back to the Paleolithic era has sculptures in it, too.
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Paleolithic Era
The Paleolithic period, which is also called the "Old Stone Age" lasted between two and a half to three million years. For art history, "Paleolithic Art" refers to the Late Upper Paleolithic period, which is when people lived. Approximately 40,000 years ago. Right through to the end of the last ice age, roughly 8,000 years ago. At which point marks the more dominant rise of Homo sapiens and the ability to create not only tools, but art as well.
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Mesolithic Era
The Mesolithic era was between the Upper Paleolithic and the Neolithic period (this is when humans lived about 10,000 years ago to about 8,000 years ago). The Mesolithic is the time in the history of the Old World when people used tools. The term Epipaleolithic is often used to refer to the same time period outside of northern Europe. Mesolithic people used small stone tools that were polished and sometimes made with points. They attached them to antlers, bone, or wood to use as spears or arrows.
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Neolithic Era
More people necessitated a shift away from hunting and gathering to the domestication of livestock and farming, sparking what is known as the Neolithic Revolution. The introduction of agriculture, which led to land ownership, and the formation of cities, is undeniably one of the most significant turning points in the history of human civilization. This is known also as the final division of the Stone Age period. A great many myths and folktales contain references to it. However, this happened over time and in different parts of the world at different times. Agriculture began in Palestine and western Iran in the middle of the eighth millennium, later in Egypt; in about the sixth millennium in Greece and the Balkans, early in the fifth millennium in China and also in Central America, but not for another one or two thousand years in northern Europe. To this day, some tribes in Australia and central South America have been able to sustain themselves through hunting and gathering without the need for agriculture. Consequently, the term "Neolithic" is sometimes misused by referring to both the time period and the culture. Even if homesteads were frequently relocated as soon as the land was exhausted by primitive farming methods, more permanent settlements followed the adoption of agriculture.
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All About Prehistoric Art
About Lesson

Knowledge about Neolithic life and culture was greatly expanded by the discovery some 40 years ago in Central Turkey of an unknown 8,000-year-old civilisation that was urban, agricultural, artistically sophisticated, and unusually peaceful, with no apparent fortifications, weapons, or war gods.


When it comes to ancient towns, one of the largest and most populous was Catal Huyuk near Konya in Turkey, which may have had up to 5,000 residents. It was much larger than any previously discovered Neolithic town and has so far yielded only one excavation of its 32 acres (13 hectares).

Over the course of a millennium, from about 6500 BC to roughly 5650 BC, the town’s economic culture developed continuously, until it was abandoned for completely undefined reasons, it is a mystery as the abandonment was seemingly peaceful.


The Neolithic Revolution was a time when plants and animals began to be domesticated; this was also a time when domestic crafts like cloth dying, and basketry was developed. Even the smelting of copper and lead has been evident.

It’s possible that Catal Huyuk served as a commercial hub for items made from obsidian (a hard volcanic stone that polishes beautifully).

It is remarkable to see the paintings and sculptures found at Catal Huyuk, despite the difficulty in deciphering them.

For example, ‘The Dancing Hunter’. Male figures with bows and arrows and leopard skins are common features of Huyuk wall-paintings depicting hunting scenes, and this one is no exception.



The depiction of women is scarce. However, they are a common sight in figurines; in fact, they outnumber the men.