Saturday, September 22, 2018

Artists of the day, September 22-23: African Rock Art

Rock paintings and engravings are Africa’s oldest continuously practiced art form. Depictions of elegant human figures, richly hued animals, and figures combining human and animal features—called therianthropes and associated with shamanism—continue to inspire admiration for their sophistication, energy, and direct, powerful forms. The apparent universality of these images is deceptive; content and style range widely over the African continent.

Not all rock art is prehistoric; in some areas these arts flourished into the late nineteenth century, while in other areas rock art continues to be made today. In the Drakensberg Mountains of South Africa, a number of rock paintings depict clashes between San (Bushmen) people and European colonists mounted on horses and armed with rifles. Many of the Drakensberg works
use subtle polychrome shading that gives their subjects a hint of three-dimensional presence. The product of many authors, time periods, and cultures, the flowing naturalism and lively sense of movement of the best rock art attests to the conviction of masterful hands and trained eyes.



Algeria

Algeria

Algeria

Algeria

Algeria

Algeria, lion footprint 


 
   
Algeria, running women
Botswana

Algeria

Chad

Chad

Chad

Chad

Chad

Chad

Chad

Chad, mounted  camel

Chad

Ethiopia

Ethiopia, monoliths

Kenya

Kenya

Kenya

Kenya

kenya, kwitone circles

Libya

Libya

Libya

Libya

Libya

Libya

Libya, giraffe

Libya, running elephant

Malawi

Malawi

Mali

Mauritania

Mauritania

Morocco

Namibia

Namibia

Namibia

Niger

Niger

Niger

Niger, giraffes

Niger, tulip head

Somaliland, cow

South Africa

South Africa

South Africa

South Africa

Sudan

Tanzania

Tanzania

Uganda

Rock from Zimbabwe

Rock from Zimbabwe

Rock from Zimbabwe

Rock from Zimbabwe

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