From early hand prints in prehistoric times, art has developed along various paths forming art linea 2025

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These 200,000-Year-Old Hand and Footprints Could Be the Worlds Earliest Cave Art. Between 169,000 and 226,000 years ago, two children in what is now Quesang, Tibet, left a set of handprints and footprints on a travertine boulder.
Accurate estimations were unavailable due to US sanctions. The oldest pictographs in Iran are seen in Yafteh cave in Lorestan that date back 40,000 and the oldest petroglyph discovered belongs to Timareh dating back to 40,800 years ago.
The art of this period appears in two main forms: small sculptures and large paintings and engravings on cave walls. There are also various examples of carved bone and ivory flutes in the Paleolithic era, indicating another creative form utilized by prehistoric humans.
The oldest stencil-type handprints, where a hand is placed on a wall and coloured powder is blown around it to make an outline, have been found along with other cave paintings in Sulawesi, Indonesia and El Castillo, Spain dating back between 40,000 to 45,000 years ago.
There is no set time for when human prehistory began and ended; there is significant debate on this subject among researchers. It may have started around 2.5 million years ago and ended around 5,600 years ago with the development of writing.
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Sometimes the hands are seen with animals or human figures. The late Grant Campbell, noted rock art specialist, suggested that these handprints were a form of signature and where great numbers are found together may be an identification with a tribal unit.
Prehistoric graffiti Paintings in the Chauvet Cave were made 35,000 years ago, but little is known about who made them or why. Early artists created stencil graffiti of their hands with paint blown through a tube. These stencils may have functioned similarly to a modern-day tag.
Cave Art (or Paleolithic Art) is a broad term for the earliest known art-making in human history. This movement is perhaps best-known today for the paintings found on the walls of many prehistoric caves, rich in depictions of animals, human figures, and forms that are a combination of man and beast.
The tools for line work in prehistoric art included natural materials like sticks or bones, which were used to engrave or draw on surfaces like stone or animal hides. Line work can vary in thickness and texture, which helps convey different emotions or dynamics in the artwork, making it a powerful tool for expression.
Currently, that honor belongs to the hand motifs and hand stencils found in the caves of the Indonesian island of Sulawesi and El Castillo cave in Spain. Both are believed to be between 40,000 and 45,000 years old.

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