Aesthetics and Rock Art

Front Cover
Thomas Heyd, John Clegg
Ashgate, 2005 - Art - 316 pages
Rock art research, the study of painting and drawing on rock surfaces made by peoples from time immemorial up to the present, is a field that is growing in importance in such disciplines as archaeology, anthropology, and art history. This book is the first treatment of the subject to analyze it from the perspective of aesthetics. Divided into three parts, The Role of Aesthetics in Rock Art Research, Aesthetic Appreciation of Rock Art: Constitutive Factors, and Case Studies: Opportunities and Tensions in Cross-Cultural Appreciation, the editors have collected essays by leading authorities in aesthetics and rock art. The book includes contributions from Peter Lamarque on Palaeolithic Cave Painting: a Test Case for Trans-Cultural Aesthetics, John Coles on Illuminations and Reflections: Looking at Scandinavian Rock Carvings, Howard Morphy on Aesthetics across Time and Place: An Anthropological Perspective on Archaeology, and Sven Ouzman on Seeing is Deceiving: Rock Art and the Non-Visual. These essays illustrate how an approach stemming from aesthetics adds to the understanding of rock art and also show how a focus on rock art can contribute to new perspectives in aesthetics.

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