Bushman rock art : an interpretive guide / Tim Forssman, Lee Gutteridge.

By: Forssman, Tim [author.]Contributor(s): Gutteridge, Lee [author.]Material type: TextTextPublisher: Pinetown, South Africa : Southbound, 2012Copyright date: ©2012Description: 237 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cmContent type: text | still image Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781920143558Subject(s): Art, San | Rock painting -- Africa, Southern -- Interpretation | Cave paintings -- Africa, Southern | Art, Prehistoric -- Africa, SouthernDDC classification: 709.0113
Contents:
Orthography and language -- Distribution of rock art -- Timeline and glossary -- The people who dance -- The Stone Age -- Hunting and gathering -- Social life -- Spiritual journeys -- The arrival of the lions -- Making rock art -- Rock art conservation -- Etiquette at rock art sites -- Animal encounters -- Different art traditions -- Bushmen -- Herders or Khoekhoe -- Farmers or Bantu-language-speaking people -- Europeans -- Interpreting rock art -- Humans and the dance -- Animals -- Powerful images -- Top public rock art sites.
Summary: The prehistoric record of southern Africa extends back some 2 million years. The oldest cultural artefacts are stone tools such as handaxes, cleavers and choppers. In more recent centuries, archaeologists have found an extensive repertoire of artefacts including not only stone tools, but tools of bone, wood and shell as well as beads, jewellery, grinding stones, clothing, fishing equipment, burials and southern Africa's enigmatic rock art. Understanding these painted scenes and menageries is not immediately obvious. Using this interpretive guide, visitors to these ancient shrines can properly interpret rock art panels and make sense of the complex world of Bushman beliefs. Bushman Rock Art is the first of its kind. Never before has rock art been so dissected and presented in such an easy- to-understand, interpretive manner, exploring the deep symbolic meaning behind the art and what these powerful images meant to Bushman artists. The images they painted, all with exquisite attention to detail, have deep ties to Bushman cosmology and their religious beliefs. With a selection of images from across southern Africa, deciphering the painted sequence of motifs is simple and innovative, making it possible for the layperson to truly appreciate this phenomenal artistic tradition. Also included is a guide to rock art sites in South Africa, Namibia and Botswana.
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
Star ratings
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)

Includes bibliography and index.

Orthography and language -- Distribution of rock art -- Timeline and glossary -- The people who dance -- The Stone Age -- Hunting and gathering -- Social life -- Spiritual journeys -- The arrival of the lions -- Making rock art -- Rock art conservation -- Etiquette at rock art sites -- Animal encounters -- Different art traditions -- Bushmen -- Herders or Khoekhoe -- Farmers or Bantu-language-speaking people -- Europeans -- Interpreting rock art -- Humans and the dance -- Animals -- Powerful images -- Top public rock art sites.

The prehistoric record of southern Africa extends back some 2 million years. The oldest cultural artefacts are stone tools such as handaxes, cleavers and choppers. In more recent centuries, archaeologists have found an extensive repertoire of artefacts including not only stone tools, but tools of bone, wood and shell as well as beads, jewellery, grinding stones, clothing, fishing equipment, burials and southern Africa's enigmatic rock art. Understanding these painted scenes and menageries is not immediately obvious. Using this interpretive guide, visitors to these ancient shrines can properly interpret rock art panels and make sense of the complex world of Bushman beliefs. Bushman Rock Art is the first of its kind. Never before has rock art been so dissected and presented in such an easy- to-understand, interpretive manner, exploring the deep symbolic meaning behind the art and what these powerful images meant to Bushman artists. The images they painted, all with exquisite attention to detail, have deep ties to Bushman cosmology and their religious beliefs. With a selection of images from across southern Africa, deciphering the painted sequence of motifs is simple and innovative, making it possible for the layperson to truly appreciate this phenomenal artistic tradition. Also included is a guide to rock art sites in South Africa, Namibia and Botswana.

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.