CHICAGO, IL.- On a September day in 1940, four teenage friends entered the Lascaux cave in southern France and stumbled upon an astonishing, priceless treasure. Beautifully subtle paintings and engravings of animals lined the cave walls highly sophisticated artwork made by the hands of our early ancestors almost 20,000 years ago.
With their evocative imagery, the cave paintings of Lascaux quickly gained recognition as the worlds premier example of prehistoric art. Lascaux (pronounced Lass-KOH) attracted over one million visitors between 1948 and 1963, when the French government closed the cave to the public in order to preserve the ancient masterpieces.
Now visitors to Chicagos
Field Museum can experience the same thrill of discovery felt by those young cave explorers more than 70 years ago.
On March 20, 2013, the Museum will open Scenes from the Stone Age: The Cave Paintings of Lascaux, featuring full-size replicas of the paintings, including some shown for the first time to the public. They are the most technically accurate reproductions of the cave paintings ever done.
The Field Museum is the first North American venue for this much-anticipated exhibition, organized by the Conseil General de la Dordogne in France. The Fields showing of the exhibition runs through September 8, 2013.
In Scenes from the Stone Age, visitors experience walking through a cave-like gallery to discover paintings such as the Great Cow Panel, Swimming Stags Frieze, Crossed Bison Panel, and Shaft Scene which have never before been reproduced and are shown here for the first time. Simulated oil lamps and torch light illuminate the paintings to make them appear as the ancient artists would have seen them.
The exhibition also features an amazingly life-like stone-age family, created by world-renowned sculptor Elisabeth Daynès. The family an old man, an adolescent, a woman, and a child are dressed in clothing and ornaments made of materials available 200 centuries ago. These people were far from the cave men of popular imagery. They were sophisticated hunters and gatherers who lived in a structured society with a culture much more refined than most of us imagine.
The exhibition features rare stone-age artifacts from the Museums collections, and a multi-screen video explains more about how Paleolithic people lived, hunted, ate, and clothed themselves.
Scenes from the Stone Age also offers an unforgettable virtual tour of the entire Lascaux cave, thanks to cutting-edge laser mapping and the most advanced 3D modeling technology. Multimedia presentations and interactive stations reveal the paintings complexities and provide insight into the talent required to create them.
For instance, visitors can observe the Great Black Cow panel as a projection on the wall constructs and deconstructs the painting, uncovering engravings, hidden animals, and symbols. Visitors can discover how the Lascaux artists took advantage of the caves natural relief to create perspective and movement.
Despite 70 years of research and analysis, the exact meaning and purpose of the Lascaux cave paintings remain a mystery. Some who have studied the paintings believe they reflect visions seen by the artists when they were in a trance-like state. Others theorize the artwork is an account of past hunting successes or part of a ritual to improve future hunting. (Interestingly however, the cave walls contain no images of reindeer a primary source of meat for Paleolithic man. There are also no paintings of plants or landscapes.)
The artwork is not haphazard but is complex, with a confidence of line, an emotive use of color, and a manipulation of form to express movement. Whatever the purpose of the paintings, they possess an undeniable beauty and power.
Scenes from the Stone Age invites us to contemplate these early masterpieces in all their splendor, and reflect on the creativity and humanity of our early ancestors.