What Supplies to Use to Recreate Art Like Prehistoric

Cave Painting - JackVersloot.jpg

Photo past Flickr user JackVersloot

In this activeness, you and your child can tell a story by creating a Paleolithic Cave Painting using a few common arts and crafts supplies.

The History of Cave Painting

Cave paintings are the prehistoric images constitute on the walls of caves all around the earth, with the oldest dating back to 32,000 B.C.East. The purpose of these cave paintings is uncertain, even so, some evidence suggests that they were not purely for decoration.

Cave Painting - Gruban.jpg

Photo by Flickr user Gruban

1 theory suggests that they served a magical purpose for hunting, in hopes of increasing the number of animals bachelor to chase. Another theory suggests that a shaman would enter the cavern and paint his visions, perhaps to proceeds power. The tertiary theory suggests that a wide range of people created these images, with the bulk existence female, proving the shaman theories invalid.

In that location is no way of proving any of these ideas correct or wrong, and then it's all near looking at the evidence.

The materials used in the cave paintings were natural pigments, created by mixing ground up natural elements such every bit dirt, red ochre, and animal blood, with animal fatty, and saliva. They practical the paint using a hand-made brush from a twig, and accident pipes, made from bird bones, to spray paint onto the cave wall.

Make Your Ain Paleolithic Cave Painting

You can make this projection in: Half an 60 minutes

What you volition demand:


  • Grocery-sized brownish paper bag, or brown construction paper

  • Colored chalk or oil pastels

  • Paint, in natural earth tones (or make your own natural paint, instructions to follow)

  • Paintbrush

  • Spray bottle (optional)

Step 1: Tear a large slice off your grocery bag or construction paper, and crumple it into a ball. This creates texture, like the wall of a cave!

Paleolithic - Step 1.png

Photo by Ann Arbor Art Eye

Step two: Outline your design lightly in chalk or pencil.

Paleolithic - Step 2.png

Photograph past Ann Arbor Art Centre

Step 3: Fill in your drawing with paint, using a paintbrush.

Paleolithic - Step 3.png

Photo by Ann Arbor Art Center

Step iv: If you lot choose, dilute some paint with water, add together information technology to a spray canteen, and place your hand on your work. Then, spray over top of your hand, creating an outline. This is how cave artists used to sign their work!

Paleolithic - Step 4.png

Photo by Ann Arbor Art Center

Step 5: Now your cave painting is consummate!

Paleolithic - Step 5.png

Photo by Ann Arbor Art Center

For even more fun!

Endeavour attaching your newspaper under a tabular array with record, and paint upside down. This is how cave painters would have worked! Put a coating over the table to create a cave-like atmosphere, and light upwards your piece of work with a flashlight.

Create your own natural paints

  1. Take natural materials such as berries, dirt, or grass and crush them in a bowl.
  2. And then, mix this with h2o and use to the surface of your painting.

Think about this

  1. What story did you lot illustrate in your cavern painting?
  2. Why do you think people painted in caves?
  3. How else practise you think people fabricated images before paper was invented?
  4. What exercise you recall cave artists were trying to communicate through their fine art?

Print and share this activeness!

See more Creativity Corner articles here.

This Creativity Corner activity has been brought to you past

AAAC - Logo 3 color.png

The Ann Arbor Art Center is a not-profit arrangement dedicated to engaging the community in the education, exhibition and exploration of the visual arts. Offering studio art classes, workshops, exhibitions, summer camps and more, the Fine art Center is jubilant over 100 years of beingness the place where inventiveness and community meet. For more information please visit www.annarborartcenter.org or stop by the Art Heart located at 117 W. Liberty in downtown Ann Arbor.

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Source: http://www.annarbor.com/entertainment/parenting/make-your-own-paleolithic-cave-painting/

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