Module Content 6 Art in Early Civilization
Module Content 6 Art in Early Civilization
Module Content 6 Art in Early Civilization
INTRODUCTION
The emergence of civilization is frequently defined or characterized in
terms of an increase in the complexity of the structure and the functioning of
human society by comparison to earlier phases. The development of the
productive capacities of mankind may be said to be both, that is, dialectically,
cause and consequence of changes affecting ways of life, social structure,
material culture, technology, knowledge and ideology that separates primitive
humanity from the early civilizations.
And yet we may observe that humanity advances by transforming the heritage
of the past, it builds upon past accomplishments and in doing so transforms
itself and transforms also the sense and meaning of its own past. In this sense,
the past may be both support and obstacle to the development of human
capacities and of social and cultural forms and processes. And in this sense
also, the past lives on producing its effects either as active or as unconscious
memory.
In the arts of the early civilizations, in Mesopotamia and Egypt, for instance,
we will see the heritage of ancestral forms being more or less slowly
transformed, developed and adapted to a new context, to fulfill new as well as
analogous functions.
An environment that the Arts will also contribute to create by providing the
material consciousness, so to speak, that is, by supplying the concrete
embodiment of the experiences, aspirations and ideas of the new times, serving
to clarify, to fix or stabilize the forms in which are expressed the consciousness
of the present, and by this helping to mold and establish the self-
understanding of a new time.
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LEARNING OUTCOMES
Upon completion of the module the students should be able to:
1. Discuss how art was used by pre-historic people to depict everyday life;
2. Identify the central themes of pre-historic art;
3. Differentiate the techniques us how art is linked with religion during the
three kingdoms of early Egypt; and
4. Explain how art is linked with religion in early Egyptian civilization.
LEARNING CONTENT
Stone Age is a term used to describe a period of history when stones were
used to make tools for survival.
Through prehistoric humans would not necessary possess the complex
rational capabilities to tell their story through written records and
accounts, some artefacts in the form of cave paintings and sculptures
would serve as story tellers.
Notes:
Venus of Willendorf
Stonehenge
The Fertile Ribbon starts from the banks of the Nile River, which flows
north to Africa and ventures into the Mediterranean.
It is this indispensability and utility that eventually led to the belief that
the Nile is to be worshipped as a god. With this came the notion that art
was something that can be ascribed and associated with religion. The
Egyptian civilization can be divided into three periods: Old, Middle, and
Kingdom. Looking at the three periods, it can be noticed that for the
Egyptians, art should be something religious and spiritual.
During the Old Kingdom, it was evident that religion was bound to the
afterlife. A concrete manifestation of this would have to be the erection of
tombs.
The palette was also a symbol that commemorates the unification of
upper and Lower Egypt. The unification was significant because it
marked the beginning of their civilization.
Narmer Palette
Queen Nefertiti
King Tutankhamen
RECAP
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Casilib, Bernardo Nicolas Jr., Casaul, Jezreel Anne R., Garing, Dorothea C.,
2018. Art Appreciation.
http://arthistorypart1.blogspot.com/2011/01/art-and-civilization.html
https://www.merriam-webster.com/