Where is the world's very first art located? When, and why, did people
begin experimenting with different materials, forms, and colors?
Prehistorians have long been asking these questions, but only recently
have they been able to piece together the first chapter in the story of
art.
Overturning the traditional Eurocentric vision of our artistic origins,
Paul Bahn and Michel Lorblanchet seek out the earliest art across the
whole world. There are clues that even three million years ago distant
human ancestors were drawn to natural curiosities that appeared
representational, such as the face-like "Makapansgat cobble from South
Africa, not carved but naturally weathered to resemble a human face. In
the last hundred thousand years people all over the world began to
create art: the oldest known paint palettes in South Africa's Blombos
Cave, the famous Venus figures across Europe all the way to Siberia, and
magnificent murals on cave walls in every continent except Antarctica.
This book is the first to assess the discovery, history, and
significance of these varied forms of art: the artistic impulse
developed in the human mind wherever it traveled.