University of Wollongong
Browse

Naturalism, nature and questions of style in Jinsha River rock art, Northwest Yunnan, China

Download (3.33 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-14, 16:09 authored by Paul S C Tacon, Li Gang, Yang Decong, Sally K May, Liu Hong, Maxime Aubert, Ji Xueping, Darren Curnoe, Andy I R Herries
The naturalistic rock art of Yunnan Province is poorly known outside of China despite two decades of investigation by local researchers. The authors report on the first major international study of this art, its place in antiquity and its resemblance to some of the rock art of Europe, southern Africa and elsewhere. While not arguing a direct connection between China, Europe and other widely separated places, this article suggests that rock-art studies about the nature of style, culture contact and the transmission of iconography across space and time need to take better account of the results of neuroscience research, similar economic/ecological circumstances and the probability of independent invention.

History

Citation

Tacon, P., Gang, L., Decong, Y., May, S., Hong, L., Aubert, M., Xueping, J., Curnoe, D. & Herries, A. (2010). Naturalism, nature and questions of style in Jinsha River rock art, Northwest Yunnan, China. Cambridge Archaeological Journal, 20 (1), 67-86.

Journal title

Cambridge Archaeological Journal

Volume

20

Issue

1

Pagination

67-86

Language

English

RIS ID

38983

Usage metrics

    Categories

    Keywords

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC