Rock Art: Messages from the Human Past
An interview with Jean Clottes
For tens of thousands of years, humans have been making their
marks on rock faces, leaving behind often puzzling testimonials
to their lifeways and thought. Found throughout the world in
every human cultural area, rock art is a unique window into
the early human mind, but a huge challenge to interpret. A renowned
leader in rock art research, Dr. Jean Clottes has spent a lifetime
examining rock art panels in France and throughout the world.
In July 2003, as a featured speaker for The Archaeology
Channel International Film and Video Festival
in Eugene, Oregon, Dr. Clottes shared some remarkable images
and intriguing interpretations with the Festival audience and
agreed to a one-on-one interview with ALI Executive Director
Rick Pettigrew. In this interview, he addressed some fundamental
questions about what rock art tells us about our distant ancestors
and their ways of thinking.
The Interview:
To view the interview,
click on the bandwidth for your player below.
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About Jean Clottes:
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Jean Clottes.
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Jean Clottes was
born in the French Pyrenees in 1933 and studied at Toulouse
University, where he earned his Ph.D. in 1975. He was appointed
Director of Prehistoric Antiquities for Midi-Pyrénées in 1971.
This vast area (bigger than Switzerland) is one of the richest
and most famous in France for prehistoric studies and in particular
for prehistoric painted cave art. He led excavations on Early
Paleolithic, Upper Paleolithic, and several Neolithic and Bronze
Age sites in the region. In 1992, he was appointed General Inspector
for Archaeology at the French Ministry of Culture and in 1993
became Scientific Advisor at the same Ministry for prehistoric
rock art, a position he held until retiring in 1999. Dr. Clottes
is a member of numerous French and international archaeological
councils, commissions and societies and is a former President
and currently Honorary President of the Société Préhistorique
Française. He has organized a number of national and international
conferences on prehistoric art and has taught at Toulouse University
and as a visiting professor at UC Berkeley. He has given many
public lectures on rock art in France and in other countries
(Argentina, Australia, Belgium, Bolivia,Canada, China, Denmark,
England, Italy, Germany, Luxemburg, Namibia, Norway, Portugal,
Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and the USA). He is widely known
for his research and management work at spectacular Chauvet
Cave, the site of the oldest known European cave art, and heads
the committee working to protect the art there when it opens
to the public in 2005. He is the editor of the International
Newsletter on Rock Art (distributed to 106 countries) and has
published over 300 scientific articles and written or edited
18 books. He is particularly interested in all aspects of rock
art, including its meaning and age as well as its interpretation
for the public.
The Web links below
are selected websites for exploring this and related subjects.
These include sites that we regard as informative and reliable.
Bradshaw
Foundation
The
Cave of Chauvet - Pont - d'Arc (Culture Ministry of France)
Contemporary
Approaches to World Rock Art (Mike Morwood)
Cosquer
Cave (Culture Ministry of France)
International
Federation of Rock Art Organizations
Paleolithic
Art in France (Dr. Jean Clottes)
Rock
Art: Petroglyphs and Pictographs (Minnesota State University)
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