here<\/a>), also has two hobbies that happen to be crucial in the study of rock art: he is a skilled draughtsman and an experienced big-game hunter.<\/p>\nThese competences spared him some of the embarrassing mistakes that crop up in many previous studies. For instance, some strange renderings of faces and bodies are not necessarily the expression of a particular aesthetic, as they turn out to be among the perspective and shading mistakes frequently made by apprentice artists. Many paintings show a few points emerging from the mouth of a wounded animal, a motif that has been repeatedly interpreted as a visual representation of the soul leaving the body – but as Guthrie points out, large animals wounded in the chest (where one must strike to kill them) generally cough out a mixture of air, saliva and blood, of which the red dots are a fairly good figurative representation.<\/p>\n
Taphonomy is where the action is<\/p>\n
The most important thing to keep in mind when discussing Paleolithic art is the dog that did not (and will not) bark, namely the overwhelming majority of artistic productions for which there is no trace whatsoever. A cardinal sin of cave art interpretation is to ignore taphonony, in other words to mistake the record for the fact – to think that what is central, important and interesting in the available record was the central, important and interesting part of the activity studied. Knowing that Cro-Magnons had the same brains as we do, and assuming that same causes produce similar effects, we can be confident that these people (who dwelt in ingeniously built shelters – emphatically not in caves) wore elaborate clothes, used make up and jewellery, danced, sang, played musical instruments and enjoyed well-crafted narratives. Of all these artistic achievements nothing survives, except a few drawings and paintings in the confines of a few deep caves. We know of rock art because caves preserved pigments – not because it was of any special importance to European Stone Age people.<\/p>\n
Big game and big women<\/p>\n
This being said, what does the record show? Parietal art is, overwhelmingly, about big mammals and big women. It shows, first and foremost, that whoever produced these hunting scenes was intensely interested in the physical aspects of hunting, in the anatomy of large animals, in the details of their gait, posture, typical behaviors and variations in appearance. Hunting is lovingly depicted, not just as the dramatic encounter of game and hunter, but in all its gory detail, with abundant representations of wounded animals, trampled hunters, broken limbs and puddles of blood. Second, the same attention to physical detail is lavished on depictions of women\u2019s bodies, large women, large breasts, details of vulvae, as well as (often rather clumsy) sex scenes. All this is more or less familiar, but again, let us think of all that is missing, all those aspects of Ice Age life that no-one apparently bothred to represent. Women foraging or nurturing their offpsring are largely absent. Equally absent are infants, children, old folks, as well as bugs and reptiles, and actually most animals that are not big mammals. Artefacts too are ignored, other than spears and arrows.<\/p>\n
Art or grafitti?<\/p>\n
Who would draw obsessively about these limited themes? Whose mental life is teeming with fantasies of plump women and dangerous pursuits? The themes of parietal art suggest that most artists were young men, in feverish pursuit of both girls and game, young men who would derive some vicarious pleasure from depicting in lavish detail what could be experienced all too rarely in the flesh. This would seem to reduce a lot of rock art to the level of common graffiti. Guthrie does not shy away from this conclusion. Indeed, there is quite a lot of supporting evidence – albeit circumstantial, of necessity. The frequent use of stencils – the artist holds his hand against the wall and spits out a misture of pigments on the wall – as well as other hand prints, reveals the work of young men. In a more speculative vein, Guthrie also surmises that only young men in quest of adventure would dare to spend time in deep caves, difficult and dangerous to explore.<\/p>\n
Stencils of hands provide cues as to the age and sex of the painter (often an adolescent male) and his clothes (as sleeves often caught some of the pigments spat out by the artist).<\/p>\n
Why see metaphysics in bison?<\/p>\n
Most of Guthrie\u2019s inferences are backed by meticulous attention to facts, notably to the statistical properties of the record, to the possible taphonomic factors that structured it, and finally to the details of Paleolithic existence in the harsh conditions of the European late Stone Age. Beyond the wealth of information about rock art, it also raises questions about our common assumptions about distant cultures.<\/p>\n
Ever since figurative Palolithic art was discovered, scholars and layfolks have used it as the springboard for the most outrageous flights of interpretive fancy. Bisons and other large mammals demonstrated hunting magic, and the many images of large women were obviously some form of ferrtility cult\u2026 Guthrie is at his wittiest when showing that the evidence for all this is largely non-existent.<\/p>\n
But why would we want to see \u201creligion\u201d in these paintings? Why not consider that masterful and clumsy representations of wounded bison and fertile women are, perhaps, about bison and women? Guthrie emphasizes the puritanical impulse beyond some of this. To your ordinary religious scholar, a picture of ample breasts is rather embarassingly erotic, unless you can recategorize it as something to do with a fertility cult. But that is not enough – and would not explain why hunting scenes, too, were construed as metaphysical.<\/p>\n
A need for \u201creligion\u201d<\/p>\n
It seems to me that many people are really committed to the existence of \u201creligion\u201d, as the integrated package of metaphysics, morality and coalitional dynamics that we are familiar with in large historical, state-based societies. No matter that most anthropologists have repeated at great length, that there is no such thing in most societies – many people just want to see the other as religious.<\/p>\n
For a few years now, I have received occasional queries from journalists about such themes as \u201cscience and religion, \u201cevolution vs. religion\u201d, \u201cDarwin and religion\u201d, \u201cIs our brain designed to be religious?\u201d and so on. Every single time, I have found that the time and energy spent on answering these questions, sometimes for hours on the phone or for many pages of email, were entirely wasted. They certainly never brought me fame, however minuscule, since my wise remarks and profound opinions were entirely ignored by the journalist, or sometimes quoted in two sentences as amounting to something like \u201cbut Boyer thinks that religions are very diverse\u201d. This is of course deeply frustrating (we all want and need our fifteen minutes) but I now realise it was entirely my fault.<\/p>\n
In answer to these queries, I always tried to point out that \u201creligions\u201d, with doctrine, corporate identity, brand of services, etc., certainly did not exist before large state societies. There is therefore no point in looking for the Pleistocene origins of salvation doctrines or religious intolerance. There is no origin of \u201creligion\u201d in that sense. There may be evolutionary underpinings to thoughts about non-existent agents, or to the compulsion to engage in ritualized behavior, but these are found in many forms of human experience that have nothing to do with gods, spirits and ancestors.<\/p>\n
This simple point, altogether banal in cultural anthropology, seems almost impossible to convey to a larger audience. To a degree, a belief in \u201creligion\u201d seems convenient both to members of modern religious guilds, for obvious reasons, but also to the Dennetts and Dawkinses of recent fame.<\/p>\n
This is not just an academic debate, as many discussions in modern politics bear on such issues as \u201creligion and the state\u201d, \u201creligious freedom\u201d. If you think that policy should be, if not based on, at least informed by sound scholarship, it does matter that politicians are debating institutional arrangements to do with non-existent objects like religion\u2026 but this, being rather far away from Paleolithic rock art, will be the subject of anoter blog.<\/p>\n
\n[1] Guthrie, R. D. (2005).\u00a0The nature of Paleolithic art<\/i>. University of Chicago Press.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" This would seem to be the conclusion from Dale Guthrie\u2019s massive The Nature of Paleolithic Art [1], perhaps the most comprehensive and rigorous study to date of cave paintings and other Stone Age artefacts. Guthrie\u2019s no-nonsense, scientifically rigorous study shatters our most cherished and deeply entrenched beliefs about rock art, demonstrating for instance that most […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":714,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[23],"tags":[],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\n
Paleolithic art: awesome \u2014 but not religious - International Cognition and Culture Institute<\/title>\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n\t \n\t \n\t \n