Cross-References: Archaeology of Art: Theoretical Frameworks
Cross-References: Archaeology of Art: Theoretical Frameworks
Cross-References: Archaeology of Art: Theoretical Frameworks
rejection of cross-cultural unilinealism and his would make the philosophes scratch their chins
and his immediate archaeologist students’ (scratch beneath their wigs?). But it is a concept
writings against all forms of speculative, compar- that would not be completely alien.
ative laws of evolution, race, or progress. The
field swings toward Enlightenment ideas with
those optimisms of the new archaeology’s first Cross-References
flush that archaeology become a science would
transform the discipline into a true anthropology ▶ Archaeological Theory: Paradigm Shift
of the past. More recently, we have witnessed the ▶ Histories of the Archaeological Discipline:
Post-Processual recoil against renouncing all Issues to Consider
attempts to make archaeology into an anthropol- ▶ Nationalism and Archaeology
ogy aping the natural sciences. In these theoreti- ▶ Social Archaeology
cal swings and debates and even in the language ▶ Winckelmann, Johann Joachim
in which those debates, we see revealed the
Enlightenment’s deep legacy.
From mid-twentieth-century European and Further Reading
North American skepticism that the motivations
of the long dead could ever be known and W.W. GAY, P. 1966. Enlightenment, an interpretation; the rise of
modern paganism. New York: Knopf.
Taylor’s argument that the archaeologist can
HANKINS, T.L. 1985. Science in the Enlightenment.
never be a part of the past, so it is impossible Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
for him or her to reconstruct a civilization, to MANUEL, F.E. 1965. (1962). Prophets of Paris: Turgot,
Lewis Binford’s late career repudiation of an Condorcet, Saint-Simon, Fourier, and Comte. New
York: Harper & Row.
earlier position on the question of whether
PORTER, R. 1990. The Enlightenment. Houndmills,
ancient beliefs and intentions could ever be Basingstoke: MacMillan.
reconstructed, and then the post-Processualists’ SPENCER, L. & A. KRAUZE. 1997. Introducing the Enlight-
astonishing reinvention of an empathetic source enment. New York: Totem Books.
STIEBING, W.H. 1993. Uncovering the past. A history of
of real knowledge of the past (Hegel and Herder
archaeology. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
would have been proud), the Enlightenment TREVOR-ROPER, H. 2010. History and the Enlightenment.
belief that the mind (intentions and motivations) Edited by J. Robertson. New Haven: Yale University
of past peoples might be comprehended by the Press.
TRIGGER, B.G. 1989. A history of archaeological thought.
living is alive and well (and hotly debated).
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
At the end of the day, one of the enduring
legacies of the Enlightenment (and of debates
post-Enlightenment) is the general acceptance
that archaeology is the study of the remains of Archaeology of Art: Theoretical
past people’s actions upon a world as socially Frameworks
constructed and perceived. Few archaeologists
would go so far as to say that the process of social Dánae Fiore
construction is mystical and, hence, utterly CONICET-AIA-UBA, Buenos Aires, Argentina
unknowable empirically. Behavior does not
depend upon an inner logic (manual of transla-
tion) that is forever hidden from outsiders to the Introduction and Definition
community. There is an emerging optimism that
past motivations can be at least partially revealed This entry provides an overview of the main the-
through the investigation of how symbols and oretical frameworks used in the archaeology of art
objects function as devices or insignia communi- and outlines their main contributions and limita-
cating peoples’ view of themselves. That would tions. These frameworks can be defined as sets of
be a novel way of putting the issue, one that concepts used by researchers to approach the
Archaeology of Art: Theoretical Frameworks 437 A
analysis and interpretation of visual imagery in Historical Background
the archaeological record, which includes mate-
rials such as rock art (petroglyphs, paintings, and Foundational Approaches: The Pioneer A
geoglyphs), portable art (decorated tools and arti- Interpretations
facts with no practical-mechanical function), In the late nineteenth century, researchers
sculptures, friezes, body ornaments (beads, pen- followed evolutionist ideas that viewed prehis-
dants, etc.), and pottery decoration. These theoret- toric hunter-gatherers as “savages” with
ical frameworks have varied along the history of a minimal cultural development; hence, they did
archaeology according to factors such as the fol- not conceive that they could have the creativity
lowing: (a) ontology, the way “art” is defined and potential to produce art. This was reversed by
conceived from each specific theoretical perspec- series of archaeological discoveries, firstly of
tive; (b) epistemology, the way art analysis and/or portable art in Paleolithic contexts (e.g., Lartet
interpretation is carried out, that is, whether it uses & Christy 1865 in Ucko & Rosenfeld 1967; Bahn
induction and/or deduction, whether it focuses on & Vertut 1988; White 2003) and later of rock
qualitative descriptions and/or searches for quan- art of Paleolithic origin (see De Sautuola-
titative patterns, and whether it uses one or more Carthailhac debate in idem). Interestingly, by
lines of independent evidence (e.g., image data, that time similar findings and inferences about
technical data, spatial data, archaeofaunal data, art’s antiquity were also being made in other
and ethnographic data); (c) the topics which are continents: in South America, some of the first
central to each framework and which are reflected rock art discoveries were made as early as 1876 in
by the questions asked about the materials under Patagonia (Argentina; Moreno 1876) and in 1877
study and by the concepts used to describe, in Northwest Argentina (Liberani & Hernandez
explain, and interpret them; and (d) methodology, 1950), and in both cases, they were attributed to
the practical ways in which data are collected and native peoples of pre-Hispanic times (which are
variables are measured in the field, analyzed in the obviously not comparable to Paleolithic antiquity
laboratory, and presented within the academic but are conceptually comparable insofar as they
community (theoretical frameworks have also var- are both prehistoric contexts).
ied according to their historical and sociocultural As part of the realization that art had prehis-
contexts, but these will not be addressed here due toric origins, the first interpretations about its
to space limitations). origins and purposes were proposed. Given that
Some theoretical approaches to art stem from by that time archaeology was still not a formal
wider archaeological theoretical frameworks (e.g., academic discipline, these hypotheses were not
culture-history, processual, post-processual, and developed within an explicit archaeological the-
evolutionary-ecological; see below), and thus, oretical framework but rather were ideas that
their concepts are mainly applications of their stemmed from the contemporary conceptions
particular conceptions about past human cultures about Paleolithic life, about Western art, as well
to the analysis and interpretation of artistic mate- as from ethnographic analogies with hunter-
rials in the archaeological record. Other gatherer societies living in several territories col-
approaches derive from the application of theoret- onized by European countries.
ical frameworks generated in other disciplines An early interpretation, known as “art for art’s
than archaeology, such as anthropology, linguis- sake,” proposed that portable art had no mean-
tics, or sociology (e.g., structuralism, semiotics, ing, pursued only an ornamental purpose, and
and historical materialism; see below). Finally, was produced due to plentiful Paleolithic envi-
others focus particularly on the development of ronmental conditions which enabled hunter-
hypotheses about art’s functions (e.g., shamanism gatherers to dedicate to these activities during
and art as landmarks along caravan routes; see their spare time (Lartet & Christy 1864 in Ucko
below) which have been developed to tackle spe- & Rosenfeld). Interestingly, this idea is detect-
cific cases-studies (Fig. 1). able in contemporary authors of South America:
A 438 Archaeology of Art: Theoretical Frameworks
art for art's sake meaningless art made as playful ornamentation during leisure time
processual approaches art's functions in adaptation - demography - interaction - aggregation - information exchange
post-processual approaches art as active form of material culture - subjective interpretations of symbolic meanings of art
social approaches art as construction of ideological discourse + means of power + economic product
visual communication approaches art as means of communication and expression through the composition of visual images
caravan routes art sites and motifs as landmarks along caravan routes
evolutionary-ecological appr. art as product of human behaviour and cultural transmission, subject to natural selection
Archaeology of Art: Theoretical Frameworks, Fig. 1 Theoretical frameworks in the archaeology of art
for example, when referring to rock art from A second pioneering interpretation was that of
Patagonia (Argentina), Burmeister (1892) totemism, which originated in ethnographic anal-
inferred that these images had been made by the ogies and asserted that some Paleolithic rock art
native inhabitants during “leisure times.” This motifs could be conceived as symbolic represen-
hypothesis is difficult to test insofar as meaning tations of kinship ancestors (Reinach 1903). Such
is the most evasive aspect of prehistoric art. How- hypothesis, which had relatively little academic
ever, the fact that visual patterns are sometimes impact, only took into account few animal repre-
repeated within individual items and among sentations and disregarded other motifs and was
assemblages indicates an intentional reproduc- clearly very hard to test. However, it did bring
tion of certain decorative motifs which can be into attention the fact that prehistoric art could
interpreted as socially significant, that is, have had a social function, in this case related to
responding to cultural norms of material culture identity and ritual use.
design, presentation, and use, regardless of their A third interpretation was that Paleolithic art
potential symbolic meaning. Moreover, it is also had been produced as part of sympathetic magic
interesting to note that the emphasis placed by rituals carried out in order to increase success in
Lartet and Christy on environmental conditions hunting prey and/or in its fertility and thus in its
entails that already this early hypothesis was tak- availability for further hunting (Reinach 1903;
ing into account a production context, which, in Breuil 1952; see details in Ucko & Rosenfeld
turn, was positively valued in spite of the domi- 1967; Bahn & Vertut 1988; White 2003). This
nant negative ideas about hunter-gatherer life. interpretation was based on the fact that species
Archaeology of Art: Theoretical Frameworks 439 A
represented in rock art were also consumed by what later would be the concepts of praxis and
Paleolithic people, as well as the fact that the engagement through art production.
images’ location was often hidden in dark panels A
of caves, a context that was assumed as likely for Normative Approaches: Culture-History and
ritual practices and not general domestic use. Structuralism
Superimposed motifs were interpreted as ritual Normative approaches to the study of art in
reiterations, while marks made on rock art and archaeology share in common the fact that they
clay-modeled animal representations were consider culture as a set of shared norms; hence,
interpreted as symbolic wounds. In turn, rock art art materials would reflect such norms in their
depictions of animals with swollen abdomens design and technique.
were seen as pregnant individuals, while the por- Culture-history was the first formal theoretical
table “Venus” figurines were considered as fertil- framework developed in academic archaeology
ity symbols given the exaggeration of the by authors such as Willey and Phillips. It oper-
reproductive portions of the human female body ated within a normative conception of culture,
in some of these figurines. and its main aim was to identify “archaeological
The number of images interpreted via this cultures” or “industries” defined by spatial-
approach was later expanded by Breuil (1952) temporal distributions of artifact types. Each
to account for other motifs: for example, preda- type was defined by one or more trait/s that
tors which were not part of the diet were depicted allowed the typological classification of artifacts
to control them symbolically; geometric signs found in the archaeological record. In turn,
were representations of traps or weapons; incom- archaeological cultures involved specific artistic
plete animals were represented as deprived of styles, defined by similarities in the types of
their senses or body parts in order to symbolically motifs (their form, color, etc.), their layout on
prevent them from escaping; human hands the artifacts, the themes represented in the figu-
superimposed or near to animal figures rative images, the techniques with which they
represented their appropriation. were created, etc. Culture-history analyses
Criticisms to the sympathetic magic hypothe- tended to create periods which organized the
sis have been many, including the following: (a) archaeological cultures in a diachronic succes-
hunting scenes are infrequent, (b) some animals sion: thus, when approaching art, this theoretical
with swollen abdomens are male, (c) most framework created stylistic sequences. With por-
represented animals are not “wounded,” and (d) table art, these were mainly based on the strati-
there are discrepancies between the represented graphic position of decorated artifacts in
taxa in the archaeofaunal and artistic records successive layers of sites. In rock art these were
(a point that would later be approached by other based on (a) the superimposition of images,
frameworks; see below). Moreover, the exclu- which were used as indicators of their relative
sively inductive epistemology underlying these dates, and (b) the indirect association of rock art
interpretations also weakens their explanatory images located in the walls of a site with pigment
power. However, one of its core contributions is residues in sequential archaeological layers,
the combination of an idealist ontology with dated sediments sealing the walls, or fallen wall
some materialist underpinnings: the symbolic fragments with imagery buried by the sediments.
aspects of art are combined with its core practical These stylistic sequences were related by the
functions in a hunter-gatherer world where prey authors to the periods not only as a way of pro-
availability seems crucial. Furthermore, both viding a context to the former but also as a way of
Reinach and Begouen (in Ucko & Rosenfeld defining the latter. Yet it is interesting to note that
1967) stressed the fact that the act of making in several cases there was no univocal correspon-
these images was essential to the performance dence between one style and one archaeological
of the sympathetic magic rites, a detail which culture, implying that despite of the “shared cul-
points to an early – though implicit – interest in tural norms” premise, archaeologists did not
A 440 Archaeology of Art: Theoretical Frameworks
assume that industries and artistic styles changed patterns and their links to the topographic zones
necessarily in a coordinated manner. For exam- (Leroi-Gourhan 1964). The emerging patterns
ple, in Western European Paleolithic art, Breuil were then interpreted as mythograms, that is, the
(1952) defined two “cycles,” Aurignacian- graphic symbolization of shared myths whose
Perigordian and Solutrean-Magdalenian, while structure was projected from the mind to the
similar – though more complex – stylistic cave walls. Such structure emerged from dual
sequences were proposed by Laming-Emperaire associations and oppositions such as light-
and Leroi-Gourhan. This kind of stylistic scheme darkness and life-death. Also, certain animal
was applied to the study of portable art and rock motif types were also associated to certain
art in many other regions of the planet (e.g., geometric signs and attributed a sexual meaning.
Gradin et al. 1979 in Patagonia, Argentina). Although these authors also developed stylis-
Due to its emphasis on culture as a set of tic sequences in the normative fashion with an
shared norms, this framework focused mostly essentialist and idealist ontology, the differences
on the types of artifacts and of motifs which of structuralism compared with the former frame-
could be used as “fossil guides” due to their work are profound: (a) its emphasis on
high frequencies and/or visual distinctiveness, a synchronic view of art, (b) its partially inductive
to construct cultural periods and stylistic and partially deductive epistemology, (c) its use
sequences, thus disregarding cultural variability. of quantitative data, and (d) its highly interpretive
Its idealist ontology – entailed by the notion that approach to the emerging patterns. Criticism did
culture was a “projection” from mind to practice – focus precisely on these issues: for example, the
and its highly inductive epistemology also lim- synchronic view collapsed images made
ited its explanatory power insofar as little room centuries apart into one single data corpus and
was left to move beyond descriptive and empiri- the mythogram interpretations were untestable.
cist accounts of the past. However, the creation of However, this framework did develop for the
art periods and stylistic sequences is still used by first time the systematic recording and quantifi-
most archaeologists as a means of organizing cation of art data (motif types, their combina-
archaeological data, although it has now become tions, and their spatial location) and proposed
clear that this is only a means, and not an end, in a testable hypothesis regarding the nonrandom
the archaeology of art. layout of images, which are still of relevance in
A second and entirely different normative the archaeology of art.
approach to art was structuralism. In accordance
with the core ideas of Levi Strauss about culture Processual Approaches: Variability,
being structured by associations and oppositions Adaptation, and Information Exchange
as a reflection of the human mental structure, and A revolutionary breakthrough from normative
following early suggestions by Raphael in 1946 theories was achieved by a group of archaeolo-
about the fact that in European Paleolithic rock gists in the 1960s (e.g., Binford, Flannery,
art animal representations were spatially Schiffer, Redman, Renfrew, Watson, Wobst,
displayed with a nonrandom structure, Leroi- etc.) who, following ecological concepts applied
Gourhan (1964) and Laming-Emperaire devel- to the study of human behavior, proposed
oped systematic analyses in search for spatial a definition of culture as an extrasomatic means
patterning of motifs in European cave art. Such of adaptation of people to the environment. This
analyses were carried out by (a) classifying motifs meant that culture could be seen as a system inte-
in groups (e.g., A ¼ horses, B ¼ bovines, grated by several subsystems (subsistence, tech-
P ¼ fish, a ¼ lines and dots signs, b ¼ ovals and nology, etc.), each of which complied with
triangles), (b) partitioning the topographic zones a specific function in the adaptation of a human
of the caves (e.g., entrance; central zone; group via the deployment of adaptive strategies.
passageway; etc.), and (c) quantifying the motif Thus, breaking away from finding cultural norms
groups in order to search for their combination and creating periods which focused on the
Archaeology of Art: Theoretical Frameworks 441 A
average items of the archaeological record, these location, vegetation distribution, faunal diversity,
“new archaeologists” focused instead on the carrying capacity, exploitation and intensifica-
study of cultural variability and on the circulation tion strategies, and their relation to the relative A
of materials, energy, and information along wide population densities they could afford) to charac-
spatial scales. This materialist ontology was com- terize the natural and social context in which
bined with a hypothetico-deductive epistemol- these “adaptive strategies” were operating.
ogy: both were foundational in one of the most In accordance with the processual agenda,
innovative and pervasive archaeological frame- these studies tended to see art production and
works (though with obvious shortcomings; see use as a means of overcoming environmental
below). stress and potential competition for resources
Although its main concern was with subsis- triggered by environmental changes and/or
tence and technology, this theoretical framework demographic pressure by creating and
had a clear impact on art analyses. Archaeologists reinforcing social bonds. This functionalist view
following this perspective stressed the need to (a) of the adaptive purposes of art has been subse-
study variability within broad periods such as quently criticized by several authors (including
“Paleolithic art” which covered thousands of self-criticism by some pioneers of this frame-
years and often masked actual variations in work; e.g., Conkey 1984) for its environmental
human behavior, (b) consider that terms such as reductionism and for its teleological reasoning.
“parietal art” or “portable art” were also labels While taphonomy/conservation, sampling, iden-
that often masked variability in spite of their tification, and publication were explicitly consid-
usefulness in academic communication, (c) go ered as biasing factors of the artistic materials
beyond inductive typological descriptions of within the archaeological record (e.g., Bahn
periods and stylistic sequences and offer expla- 1982; Conkey 1985), these analyses have been
nations proposed by explicit hypotheses tested criticized because of their sampling strategies
against systematically analyzed data, and (d) and statistical methods, which have subsequently
focus not just on the potential symbolic meanings been refined.
of art (which are often unattainable) but also on Following the adaptive approaches to culture,
art’s functions within the human groups that pro- style and function were dichotomically conceived
duced it (e.g., Conkey 1985). by some authors, the latter being considered as
These ideas were applied to several Paleolithic adaptive while the former being considered as
case studies, in which authors – following nonadaptive (e.g., Dunnell). However, other
Wobst’s demographic simulations and analyses authors argued that style did have specific adap-
about hunter-gatherer populations – focused on tive functions as systems of information exchange
portable art and/or rock art similarities to identify (e.g., Wobst). This, in turn, led to a whole debate
inter-site links viewed as evidence of regional on the active and passive functions of style which
interaction. Art was a key evidence through are applicable to art analyses (see the entry on
which networks, alliances, and aggregation sites ▶ Style: Its Role in the Archaeology of Art in this
were identified by (a) qualitative comparisons encyclopedia).
between designs (Bahn 1982; Gamble 1982), (b) Another crucial development within this
inter-site comparisons of relative frequencies of framework was the flow model presented by
decorated artifacts (Conkey 1980; Bahn 1982; Schiffer in 1972 “to view the "life history" or
White 1992), (c) detailed analyses of element processes of systemic context of any material
repertoire and structural principles frequencies element” which included “procurement, manu-
and diversity (Conkey 1980), and (d) number of facture, use, maintenance, and discard,” in order
rock art sites versus stylistic regionalization or to account “for the production of a substantial
homogeneity (Jochim 1983). These data were portion of the archaeological record.” This
contextualized by their environmental setting model, similar to the chaı̂ne opératoire concept,
(e.g., paleotemperature, sites’ geographic was adapted to the analysis of rock art production
A 442 Archaeology of Art: Theoretical Frameworks
of ideological discourses to mask and/or justify labor) and social relations of production (the
inequalities (Earle 1989, Lumbreras 1998, Perez engagement of persons and materials and knowl-
Gollán 2000). edge in such work process) in order to create an
Such political functions to create and repro- image-artifact. In turn, art production entails
duce intragroup differences can be identified by a certain labor investment, which can be assessed
studying art styles and luxury items, which are via multiple variables, for example, (a) media on
a means of conferring and sustaining status and which to produce the images, their abundance/
power due to the fact that they operate visually, scarcity, accessibility/inaccessibility, hardness,
catching people’s attentions and generating aes- and texture; (b) raw material availability to
thetic reactions – which are sometimes difficult to make tools and prepare paint; (c) expedient/
manage rationally, hence their high effectiveness curated nature of engraving and painting tools;
(Earle 1989). Moreover, the power emanating and (d) simplicity/complexity of image-making
from durable objects tends to feel more perma- techniques and of visual designs produced with
nent, hence unquestionable, thus conferring them. The study of such variables allows one to
solidity also to the social position of their owners transcend a descriptive approach to the material-
(Earle 1989). In turn, ideological functions of art ity of art and is relevant to characterizing
have been often studied by analyzing the images’ the amount and quality of labor invested in its
motifs/topics and the ways in which these are production, thus revealing economic aspects
represented: for example, in the case of Aguada underlying its creation, which in turn shed
style (found in the pottery, metal objects, wooden light on some of the ways people engaged
artifacts and textiles from Northwest Argentina), themselves – through practical manipulation and
the images of a sacrificer holding a human head visual perception – with the material features of
and, particularly, of a feline are pervasive these images.
throughout these materials and have been The orthodoxy of these approaches has been
interpreted as a means of legitimizing power and rightly criticized for its reductionist economic
hereditary social inequality, by linking the determinism and for its mechanistic and teleo-
governants with sacred beings and, through such logical approaches to art’s functions as mere
iconographic manipulation, represent the elites reproductive reflections of the economic struc-
with divine attributes (Perez Gollan 2000). ture. Moreover, on many occasions, the poten-
These analyses of the political and ideological tial political and/or ideological functions of art
functions of art have focused heavily on art’s are not well grounded, hence reducing the
capacity to express ideas and thus on the mental explanatory power of these concepts. For this
dimension underlying its creation and use, while reason, materialist and neo-Marxist approaches
the material conditions in which it was produced need to not just assert but demonstrate in each
and displayed have mainly been considered as an case why and how a certain art form has com-
external context which determined art creation, plied (or not) with such functions. Yet, breaking
but have often not been thoroughly analyzed as away from the Cartesian mind-body split, which
an internal component of art’s production. How- originally led to art being associated with ide-
ever, some authors have indeed noted that art can ology and not with economy, and recognizing
also be conceived not just as a representation but that art is intrinsically and simultaneously
as a presentation of a material object and, as such, ideological-political-economic, strengthens the
as a “productive work” (Lumbreras 1998). Thus, viewpoints proposed by this framework. More-
the artistic work process can be reconstructed via over, its materialist ontology – which allows to
the analysis of the production sequence (Aschero focus on contextual and internal material
1988; White 1992). Also, conceiving art as an aspects of art production and display – and its
economic product entails that it is a material arti- dialectical epistemology, combining deduction
fact made through the combination of productive and induction, have great potential within the
forces (raw materials, tools, techniques, human archaeology of art.
Archaeology of Art: Theoretical Frameworks 445 A
Approaches to Art as Visual Communication: functions as an expressive symbol when it
Semiotics, Cognition, and Expressive operates as a token of the feelings or the attitude
Symbolism of an “ego” toward an “alter,” thus mediating the A
Most frameworks do involve the notion that art affective component in such interaction (Tanner
has a communicative aspect, but two frameworks 1992).
have focused on this feature as their core concept. The complete application of these approaches
On the one hand, following the work of linguists seems to require other sources of information
and semioticians such as Saussure, Peirce, and rather than just the archaeological materials,
Barthes and also having clear influences from the thus being more fully applicable to historic than
structuralist framework presented above, the to prehistoric cases. Yet many approaches devel-
semiotics approach has put forward the notion oped by these frameworks can be found in diverse
that visual art is the product of an act of commu- case studies.
nication, which includes a source who produces
a message containing information, a code in Approaches to Art’s Functions: Case-Oriented
which it is formulated, a channel through which Hypotheses
it is transmitted, and receiver(s) who decodes it A number of art analyses are based not on wide
(if they share a common code with the source) theoretical frameworks but rather on specific
and who may respond or feedback to it. Three sets hypotheses which are oriented and applicable to
of rules function in the code in order for the specific case studies. Such is the case with
information contained in the message to be trans- Shamanism, which proposes that many rock art
mitted: syntactic, pragmatic, and semantic. The motifs are representations of images seen during
first two have clearly a greater chance of archae- altered states of consciousness, induced through
ological visibility in art designs, since the types of trance and/or through the consumption of hallu-
motifs and their spatial relations in terms of cinogenic substances which generate entopic
association, juxtaposition, direction, distribution, phenomena (Lewis Williams & Dowson 1988).
etc. (e.g., Llamazares 1992) can help identify The application of this hypothesis, originally
aspects of the rules underlying the syntactic com- developed for South African cases, requires the
position and pragmatic use of the images. use of ethnographic information as an indepen-
Also having developed partly from structural- dent source of data to corroborate it when apply-
ism, approaches oriented to the study of cognition ing it to other case studies in order to avoid
in the archaeology of art have focused on analyz- equifinality problems: otherwise, similar motifs
ing the steps taken by past artists in the creation of could be ascribed to shamanism when in fact they
images with specific features (symmetry, size, may well be the product of rather different
etc.) and how their visual perception has partici- causes.
pated in such process. To do so, special attention Another function attributed to rock art is that
has been given to how forms (a) are selected and of marking significant points and roads along
filtered among a wider array of possibilities, caravan routes. This hypothesis has been tested
through the emphasis of some details and the by plotting the distribution of rock art sites and
omission of others, in order to facilitate and econ- motifs depicting llama herds along wide spatial
omize their visual perception and interpretation; ranges in Northern Chile and checking their cor-
(b) are categorized within each cultural context; respondence with trails followed by llama shep-
and (c) are contained within a cultural memory herds on their travels across long-scale distances
which allows the organization of image percep- and with sites containing evidence of these faunal
tion, makes images recognizable and significa- resources (Nuñez Atencio 1976).
tive, and influences the elaboration of future Rock art has also been related to identity in
forms (Washburn 1983). Finally, following two different and complementary manners: (a) as
Parsons’ work, the expressive symbolism an archaeological indicator of social groups and
approach has proposed that an art object their boundaries and (b) as an intentional
A 446 Archaeology of Art: Theoretical Frameworks
and epistemological similarities or differences The uses of style in archaeology: 73-81. Cambridge:
discussed above. A combination of different Cambridge University Press.
GAMBLE, C. 1982. Interaction and alliance in Palaeolithic
frameworks can often be viable and relevant society. Man 17: 92-107.
where they are not mutually contradictory in their JOCHIM, M. 1983. Palaeolithic cave art in ecological per-
core concepts and methods. Through this critical spective, in G. Bailey (ed.) Hunter-gatherer economy
panorama, the reader can follow those approaches in prehistory. New directions in archaeology: 212-19.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
of his/her interest and explore, pursue, and link LEROI-GOURHAN, A. 1964. Les religions de la préhistoire
their paths in order to shed new light on ancient art. (Paléolithique). Paris: Presses Universitaires de
France.
LEWIS WILLIAMS, J.D. & T.A. DOWSON. 1988. The signs of
all times. Current Anthropology 29(2): 201-45.
Cross-References LUMBRERAS, L.G. 1998. The social context of art in
pre-Columbian America, in L.G. Lumbreras &
▶ Aesthetics in Archaeology C. Aldunate (ed.) Art in pre-Columbian America:
▶ Art Studies: Normative Approaches 11-64. Santiago: Museo Chileno de Arte
Precolombino.
▶ Mobiliary Art, Paleolithic MELLARS, P. 2005. The impossible coincidence. A single-
▶ Post-Processual Archaeology species model for the origins of the modern human
▶ Post-Processualism, Development of behaviour in Europe. Evolutionary Anthropology 14:
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