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<< News >> Rare Paintings of Prehistoric Life Revealed

Submitted by Andy B on Wednesday, 13 March 2013  Page Views: 16461

MuseumsCountry: England
Rare Paintings of Prehistoric Life Revealed
Rare Paintings of Prehistoric Life Revealed submitted by Andy B : A lake village painted by Ernst Griset. An unusually dry winter in 1853 caused Swiss lake levels to fall, exposing ancient remains that attracted much attention – Lubbock helped to excavate some. In contrast to palaeolithic sites, the neolithic Swiss lake villages produced bones of domestic cattle and cultivated cereal grains, signs of Europe’s first farmers. Source: Mike Pitts blog (Vote or comment on this photo)
Fourteen rare Victorian paintings depicting early prehistoric life are now on display in a new exhibition about the birth of archaeology in Britain, curated by Mike Pitts and running at the Wellington Arch in Central London until the 21st of April. The paintings have never before benn displayed in public together, and were commissioned in 1869 by Sir John Lubbock - the archaeologist and MP who campaigned relentlessly for the protection and preservation of Britain's ancient monuments, and who eventually got his way despite objections from other powerful landowners.

Painted by Ernst Griset, once renowned as an animal illustrator but today all but forgotten, the watercolours are among the earliest artistic attempts to reconstruct the prehistoric past. Although perhaps naïve by today's standards, the paintings were ground-breaking in their time for their scholarship and attention to detail. They were informed by recent archaeological finds of stone tools and fossils from around Europe as well as reports of contemporary 'savages', including some seen by Charles Darwin.

The paintings depict our ancient ancestors hunting bison and even a mammoth with huge curving tusks as well as using stone-age tools to fashion a canoe and - in a domestic scene - gathered around a fire. "In the 19th century, new archaeological discoveries revealed more and more about prehistoric people," said English Heritage's Cathy Power. "These fascinating paintings show the Victorians using the new information that archaeology was unearthing and attempting to accurately depict the lives of their ancient ancestors."
This spectacular scene shows a mammoth battling 14 men. The huge curving tusks and long hair make clear this is an extinct species, well documented in Europe by fossil finds.

On loan from both the Bromley Museum and the Lubbock family, the paintings are included in a new exhibition - The General, The Scientist & The Banker: The Birth of Archaeology and the Battle for the Past - focussing on the Victorian pioneers who strove to save Britain's great prehistoric sites from destruction. In 1859 two extraordinary events changed the way people considered human existence: a flint axe was found in a French quarry on the same level as bones of extinct animals, and scientist Charles Darwin published On the Origin of Species. Both Darwin's big idea and the discovery of the axe broke the Biblical version of history.

Opening with the book and the axe, the English Heritage exhibition tells the story of what happened next, as archaeological pioneers fought to bring recognition and legal protection for Britain's ancient monuments. Rare artefacts, drawings and manuscripts bring to life a tale of Victorian prejudice and vision as well as illustrate the achievements of three men: scientist Charles Darwin, archaeologist General Pitt-Rivers and banker Sir John Lubbock. Together they revealed how the landscape is rich with ancient history, as they fought to bring recognition and legal protection for Britain's ancient monuments.

The General, the Scientist & the Banker: The Birth of Archaeology and the Battle for the Past is the first in a series of five exhibitions at the Quadriga Gallery in London's Wellington Arch. Marking the centenary of the landmark 1913 Ancient Monuments Act, the series traces the movement to protect England's heritage, from its early days in the 19th century to the challenges of today.
The Devil's Den in Wiltshire in about 1865. The Neolithic burial chamber was one of the monuments included on the list (or 'schedule') in the Ancient Monuments Protection Act of 1882. The intention of that Act was that all the monuments, with the consent of their owners, would be brought into state guardianship.

The exhibition Birth of Archaeology and the Battle for the Past is at The Quadriga Gallery, Wellington Arch until 21 April, Wednesdays to Sundays and on Bank Holidays, 10am-5pm. Entry is £4 for adults and you can get a 2 for 1 voucher for travel by train or a discounted joint ticket with the nearby English Heritage property Apsley House.

More details at the Wellington Arch, Quadriga Gallery.

Note: An exhibition to mark 100 years of protecting the past running at the Wellington Arch in London until 21st April

Rare Paintings of Prehistoric Life Revealed
Rare Paintings of Prehistoric Life Revealed submitted by Andy B : The interior of a neolithic tomb by Ernest Griset from approx 1870. It is almost certainly based on the West Kennet long barrow in the Avebury world heritage site with a good view of Silbury Hill, which was bought by Sir John Lubbock in 1873. A description of excavations in the barrow published in 1868 conjured a chamber lined with six large slabs, the gaps filled with dry-stone walling, four arti... (Vote or comment on this photo)

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"Rare Paintings of Prehistoric Life Revealed" | Login/Create an Account | 3 News and Comments
  
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Re: The Birth of Archaeology & the Battle for the Past, running untiil April 21st, Lo by ventifact on Wednesday, 13 March 2013
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Thank you for letting us know about this exhibit. What are the rough dimensions of these paintings?
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Re: Rare Paintings of Prehistoric Life Revealed by jamesmurrel on Wednesday, 13 March 2013
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what an amazing collection of paintings,beautifully illustrated,giving a crisp insight into pre-history,its so nice to see,its almost as though you are veiwing the acual sites at first hand...very well done
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The Birth of Archaeology & the Battle for the Past, running untiil April 21st, London by Andy B on Wednesday, 13 March 2013
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Mike Pitts writes: I really want you to see these paintings. Made around 1870, they’ve never been hung in public before. They are a wonderful early experiment in archaeological reconstruction illustration, are little known, and need researching – along with their creator. This is going to be a long blog, but the subject deserves it.

There are 14 of the paintings in the Quadriga Gallery in the Wellington Arch, in the exhibition The Birth of Archaeology & the Battle for the Past (running until April 21st). The show is about Charles Darwin, Sir John Lubbock and General Pitt-Rivers, and the 1882 Ancient Monuments Act. There are some wonderful things, including a slice of Silbury Hill from inside the 1849 tunnel (I like to think it was originally wrapped like a piece of wedding cake), and one of William Stukeley’s commonplace books (both loaned by Wiltshire Museum in Devizes).

But I want to write about the paintings. There are 20 in the full set, 19 scenes of prehistoric life, and a view of a tropical island. They were apparently commissioned by John Lubbock around 1870 (only two are dated), and used to hang in his home-cum-museum at High Elms in Downe, Kent. They were never published.

More from Mike Pitts' blog, with lots of illustrations of the pictures. See the top of this page for the one which appears to be the interior of West Kennet Long Barrow.

http://mikepitts.wordpress.com/2013/02/11/ernest-griset-in-london/

The exhibition The Birth of Archaeology & the Battle for the Past curated by Mike is at Quadriga Gallery in the Wellington Arch, Hyde Park Corner, London, running until April 21st 2013.
http://www.english-heritage.org.uk/daysout/properties/wellington-arch/exhibitions-at-the-
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