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From
Under the Gables:
No matter where found, the ancient art of the cave people features the stenciled or traced hand. "The human hand forms one of the most ancient themes of human art," reports a study of hand stencils in Upper Palaeolithic cave art,
published by Durham University. "Prehistoric examples of hand prints
(positive images formed by covering the hand with paint and placing it
on a surface, rather like modern children create) and stencils (negative
images formed by placing the hand against a surface and blowing paint
around it) are known from prehistoric contexts in Latin America, the
Sahara, Indonesia, Australia and Tasmania, in many cases dating back
several thousand years. For decades these have been thought to be Mid
Upper Palaeolithic in age (around 22-29,000 14C BP) but recent dating
and critical evaluation of existing data have shown that they are among
the earliest examples of European Upper Palaeolithic cave art.,
stretching back at least to 35,000 (calendar) years ago."
Investigations by Anthropology professor Dean Snow at Pennsylvania State University
further show that many of the hands stenciled or traced are those of
women, and it is thought that this could mean that the stenciling of
hands had a religious significance. Henri
Focillion would not be surprised by such conclusions. "I seem to see
primitive man inhaling the world through his hands," Focillon writes in
his essay "In Praise of Hands," "stretching his fingers into a web to
catch the imponderable." (Read more.)
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