Since the Upper Palaeolithic (at least) humans represent themselves. The oldest evidence known from Europe and North Africa shows standardized forms mainly expressed through figurines (in different raw materials) and some examples of rock art (both petroglyphs and paintings). With the introduction of the first forms of food production (Mesolithic; Neolithic; other equivalents), we see a drastic increase of human representations all over the world, with a lower standardization of forms and a growing variety of media, including pottery and an array of other materials. Different approaches have characterized the study of this evidence, spanning from diffusionist to microcontextual overviews; from pre-iconographic to iconographic to iconologica...
The history of civilization has handed down the traces of past to our age. In the present study titl...
This paper examines exchange imagery and ideology of the human body manifested through figurines fro...
How is it possible that civilization has a global understanding of the abstraction of the human form...
This article considers the materialization of human representations in Neolithic northern Greece and...
A small figurine found at Berekhat Ram on the Goland Heights in the early 1980s suggest that modern ...
Fully illustrated, Prehistoric Figurines brings a radical new approach to one of the most exciting, ...
The workshop will focus on the human representation in Neolithic and Bronze Age communities around a...
This book presents a study of material images and asks how an appreciation of the making and unfoldi...
This dissertation demonstrates that the surprising iconography of human images in the archaeological...
Anthropomorphic figurines constitute one of the most interesting and equally enigmatic objects of th...
Visually-compelling small finds have traditionally been examined for their appearances. These artefa...
How can archaeologists interpret ancient art and images if they do not treat them as symbols or sign...
The introduction into the issues discussed in the book 'Aesthetics in Archaeology' (no. 3) is entitl...
Without wishing to set out an exhaustive discussion of the subject, we mention that our approach env...
The role of the human body in the creation of social knowledge-as an ontological and/or aesthetic ca...
The history of civilization has handed down the traces of past to our age. In the present study titl...
This paper examines exchange imagery and ideology of the human body manifested through figurines fro...
How is it possible that civilization has a global understanding of the abstraction of the human form...
This article considers the materialization of human representations in Neolithic northern Greece and...
A small figurine found at Berekhat Ram on the Goland Heights in the early 1980s suggest that modern ...
Fully illustrated, Prehistoric Figurines brings a radical new approach to one of the most exciting, ...
The workshop will focus on the human representation in Neolithic and Bronze Age communities around a...
This book presents a study of material images and asks how an appreciation of the making and unfoldi...
This dissertation demonstrates that the surprising iconography of human images in the archaeological...
Anthropomorphic figurines constitute one of the most interesting and equally enigmatic objects of th...
Visually-compelling small finds have traditionally been examined for their appearances. These artefa...
How can archaeologists interpret ancient art and images if they do not treat them as symbols or sign...
The introduction into the issues discussed in the book 'Aesthetics in Archaeology' (no. 3) is entitl...
Without wishing to set out an exhaustive discussion of the subject, we mention that our approach env...
The role of the human body in the creation of social knowledge-as an ontological and/or aesthetic ca...
The history of civilization has handed down the traces of past to our age. In the present study titl...
This paper examines exchange imagery and ideology of the human body manifested through figurines fro...
How is it possible that civilization has a global understanding of the abstraction of the human form...