Keeping a 73,000-Year-Old Tradition Alive
Going Primitive
About 73,000 years ago, somebody made a pattern of nine red lines on on a small stone flake found in Blombos Cave, about 200 miles east of Cape Town, South Africa. It may be the first known work of art. The idea eventually spread all over the world until hundreds of caves were decorated with hand prints, magic symbols and hunting tableaus. The most recent examples of this art form were recently discovered in the wilds of Upper Manhattan at Inwood Public Library and United Palace of Cultural Arts.
Students in our free Saturday arts workshops learned about the history of cave art before drawing and coloring their own primitive designs on sheets of brown butcher paper. All of the completed drawings were then taped together to make a simulated cave that the young artists could crawl through and explore.
While this may seem like play, (and it certainly is a lot of fun), these young artists are improving their academic and social skills, including, language development, decision making, visual learning, inventiveness and cultural awareness.
The Art Around the World program was first developed last summer, when Creative Art Works partnered with the Jewish Community Center of Manhattan (JCC) to provide an integrated art unit at a Math and Literacy Camp at PS 163.
The program is being taught by CAW Teaching Artist Lauren Genutis at the Inwood Library and Angel Thompson at UPCA.
Classes continue though the spring and are free to the public. No advance registration is required. Parents are strongly encouraged to participate, but it is not mandatory.