Art History Timeline - Briana Galmitz

  • 40,000 BCE

    Cave Art

    Cave Art
    "Cave art" - describe any kind of man-made image on the walls, ceiling or floor of a cave or rock shelter.
    In connection with Stone Age art created during the last Ice Age, between about 40,000 and 10,000 BCE
    Cave art embraces five different types of art, as follows. (1) Hand prints and finger marks. (2) Abstract signs. (3) Figurative painting. (4) Rock engraving. (5) Relief sculpture.
  • 38,000 BCE

    Ivory Carving

    Ivory Carving
    The ivory carving known as the Lion Man of Hohlenstein-Stadel is carved. The earliest Asian art emerges as well.
    Ivory is a type of dentine - a hard, dense bony tissue which forms most of the teeth and tusks of animals - which has been used for millennia as a material for carving sculpture
  • 37,000 BCE

    Venus Figurines

    Venus Figurines
    In archeology, the term "Venus Figurines" is an umbrella description relating to Stone Age statuettes of women, created during the Aurignacian or Gravettian cultures of the upper Palaeolithic
  • 33,000 BCE

    Perigordian Era

    Perigordian Era
    Beginning of Perigordian culture. Derived from the earlier Mousterian, practised by Homo neanderthalensis, it employed Levallois flake-tool technology, producing serrated stone tools as well as a flint blades known as "Chatelperron points".
  • 30,000 BCE

    France Cave Art

    France Cave Art
    Important animal & figurative carvings
    - Chauvet cave paintings
  • 26,000 BCE

    Charcoal Drawings

    Charcoal Drawings
    Gabarnmang charcoal drawing (carbon-dated to 26,000 BCE) in Arnhem Land.
  • 25,000 BCE

    Gravettian Art

    Gravettian Art
    Gravettian art begins. Practiced in eastern, central and western Europe, the signature tool was a small pointed blade with a blunt but straight back - called a Gravette Point.
    The art of the Gravettian era is characterized above all by its small scale mobiliary art
  • 18,000 BCE

    Ancient Pottery

    Ancient Pottery
    Xianrendong Cave Pottery - the world's most ancient pottery from Jiangxi, China.
  • 15,000 BCE

    Magdalenian Art

    Magdalenian Art
    Magdalenian art begins, the final major culture of the Upper Paleolithic, practised by Homo Sapiens across western and central Europe, as the Ice retreated northwards.
  • 14,450 BCE

    Earliest Japanese Art

    Earliest Japanese Art
    Earliest Jomon pottery, Odaiyamamoto I site, Japan. Earliest known Japanese Art.
  • 10,000 BCE

    Oldest Swiss Art

    Oldest Swiss Art
    The Venus of Monruz: One of the last and smallest Venus Figurines to be carved during the era of Paleolithic art
    Oldest art in Switzerland. End of Paleolithic art. End of the last Ice Age.
  • 10,000 BCE

    Mesolithic Era

    Mesolithic Era
    Mesolithic Era Begins
    The Mesolithic is a transitional era between the chipped-tool, hunter-gatherer culture of the Upper Paleolithic, and the polished-tool, farming culture of the Neolithic. Went from hunting/gathering to agriculture. Start of Chinese Pottery
  • 9500 BCE

    Cave of the Hands

    Cave of the Hands
    Cueva de las Manos (Cave of the Hands), stencils, paintings, Argentina, the most famous example of Mesolithic art in the Americas.
  • 8000 BCE

    Neolithic Era

    Neolithic Era
    Neolithic Era begins in Middle East and Southeast Europe
    Tassili-n-Ajjer rock art, Algerian paintings and petroglyphs.
  • 7500 BCE

    Wood Carving

    Wood Carving
    Shigir Idol, the world's oldest surviving wood carving of a human figure.
  • 7000 BCE

    Neolithic Art in China

    Neolithic Art in China
    Beginning of Neolithic Art in China
    The major form of Neolithic art was ceramic pottery. Oven-fired pottery appears in Mesopotamia where farming begins.
    People settle on the banks of the River Nile.
  • 5500 BCE

    Goddess Terracotta Figurine

    Goddess Terracotta Figurine
    Goddess terracotta figurine, Catal Huyuk, Anatolia, an early example of religious art.
  • 4000 BCE

    Neolithic Era in Europe

    Neolithic Era in Europe
    Neolithic Era begins in Northern & Western Europe
    A much more settled form of existence, based on farming and rearing of domesticated animals, as well as the use of polished tools.
    Jade carving begins in China, as does Chinese lacquerware and silk production.
  • 3500 BCE

    Mesopotamian Civilization

    Mesopotamian Civilization
    Mesopotamian civilization begins (Iraq). The emergence of Uruk, a first city-state. First wheeled vehicles appear in Europe.
    Ancient Persian art includes the intricate ceramics from Susa and Persepolis. Oldest known prehistoric bronze sculptures produced in the Maikop culture of the Russian North Caucasus
  • 3300 BCE

    Hieroglyphs

    Hieroglyphs
    Sumerian civilization (S. Iraq). First writing system (hieroglyphs)
  • 3200 BCE

    Egyptian Tomb

    Egyptian Tomb
    Egyptian art and civilization begin. The building of Newgrange Megalithic Tomb begins.
    Sumerian civilization develops its own monumental architecture - a type of stepped pyramid called a ziggurat, built from clay-fired bricks.
  • 3200 BCE

    Bronze Age

    Bronze Age
    Metallurgy develops, as does Bronze Age art. The more complex copper-and-tin bronze casting techniques appear in the Indus Valley Civilization of India during the period.
  • 3100 BCE

    Egyptian Wall Paintings

    Egyptian Wall Paintings
    Egyptians create first wall paintings in tombs.
  • 2700 BCE

    Egyptian Relief Sculptures

    Egyptian Relief Sculptures
    Egyptians develop first painted relief sculptures.
  • 2660 BCE

    Egyptian Statue

    Egyptian Statue
    Egyptians develop the first seated and free-standing statues.
  • 2550 BCE

    Great Pyramid of Giza

    Great Pyramid of Giza
    Start of Egyptian Pyramids.
    The Architect Hemon designs the Great Pyramid at Giza; one of the Seven Wonders of the World
  • 2550 BCE

    Sphinx

    Sphinx
    Khufu builds the Sphinx
  • 2500 BCE

    Aegean Art

    Aegean Art
    Start of Aegean Art in eastern Mediterranean.
    The term "Aegean art" refers to a cluster of differing cultures that flourished in the area of the Aegean Sea in the eastern Mediterranean.
  • 1750 BCE

    Chinese Art

    Chinese Art
    First Chinese art appears, bronzes of Shang Dynasty art, as well as the earliest Calligraphy.
  • 1500 BCE

    Iron Age Art

    Iron Age Art
    Iron Age Art begins in Europe.
    Dying Gaul (c.232 BCE) by Greek
    Sculptor Epigonus.
  • 750 BCE

    Archaic Geometric Greek Pottery

    Archaic Geometric Greek Pottery
    First appearance of Geometric style of Greek Pottery.
    Going far beyond the circular designs of the earlier protogeometric period, geometric pottery includes some of the finest surviving works of Greek visual art. Vases were often made according to a strict system of proportions.
    The Amphora [c.750 BCE]
    Archaic Greek
  • 650 BCE

    Black Figure Pottery

    Black Figure Pottery
    black-figure pottery: figures were first drawn in black silhouette, then marked with incised detail.
    Terracotta column-krater
  • 600 BCE

    Greek Architecture

    Greek Architecture
    The Parthenon
    It was during 6th and 7th centuries that stone was used for Greek public buildings, especially temples.
  • 600 BCE

    Greek Sculpture

    Greek Sculpture
    Dominated by two human stereotypes: the standing nude youth (kouros) and the standing draped girl (kore).
  • 480 BCE

    Greek Classical Period

    Greek Classical Period
    In the history of sculpture, no period was more productive than the 150 years between 480 and 330 BCE.
  • 450 BCE

    Classical Greek Art

    Classical Greek Art
    Classical Greek painting reveals a grasp of linear perspective and naturalist representation
  • 250 BCE

    Hellenistic Art

    Hellenistic Art
    The period of Hellenistic art opens with the death of Alexander the Great and the incorporation of the Persian Empire into the Greek world.
    Altar of Zeus at Pergamon
  • 27 BCE

    Roman Art

    Roman Art
    Era of Roman Art begins
    Marcus Aurelius' Column
  • 300

    Early Christian Art

    Early Christian Art
    Early Christian art becomes more widespread
    Jesus healing the bleeding woman, Roman catacombs, 300–350
  • 450

    Dark Ages (Medieval art)

    Dark Ages (Medieval art)
    Beginning of Medieval art
    Ravenna, S Apollinare Nuovo, mosaic showing the Betrayal of Christ
  • 500

    Byzantine Art

    Byzantine Art
    The most prominet feature was that it became more abstract, favoring symbolism rather than realistic representations
    the Hagia Sophia in Constantinople – the image of Christ Pantocrator
  • 1050

    Romanesque Art

    Romanesque Art
    Art was used to spread religion and to bring people closer to God
    Saint Mary, Joseph and the birth of Christ. Romanesque period
  • 1140

    Gothic Art

    Gothic Art
    Architecture was the principal means of artistic Expressions during the gothic period
    Sainte Chapelle
  • 1400

    Early Renassisance

    Early Renassisance
    Scientific and Mathematical advances, inspired by serious study of ancient Greek and Roamn culture, became tools that artist used in their work
    Christ Handing the Keys of the Kingdom to St. Peter
  • 1500

    High Renaissance

    High Renaissance
    Artist of the High Reniassance disregarded the rules of the Early Reniassance and let their feelings dicate their styles
    The Creation of Adam
  • 1530

    Mannerism Era

    Mannerism Era
    In Parmigianino's Madonna with the Long Neck
  • Baroque Art

    Baroque Art
    The Triumph of the Immaculate by Paolo de Matteis
    Baroque art was a dramatic and grandeur style
  • Rococo Art

    Rococo Art
    characterized by soft colors and curvy lines, and depicts scenes of love, nature, amorous encounters, light-hearted entertainment, and youth to create the illusions of surprise, motion, and drama
    The Bathers
  • Neoclassicism Era

    Neoclassicism Era
    This art era is based on France under Napolean Bonaparte, who did not like the favored a more classical approach of ancient Greece and Rome
    Jacques-Louis David, Oath of the Horatii
  • Romanticism

    Romanticism
    Two Men Contemplating the Moon (1830)
    By the German Romantic painter Caspar David Friedrich.
  • Photography

    Photography
    Louis Daguerre takes the first photo
    Boulevard du Temple and the first photograph of human beings, taken by Louis Daguerre in 1838.
  • Victorian Art

    Victorian Art
    The First of May
    rapid industrial development and social and political change
  • Realism Art

    Realism Art
    In realism art, the art was rejected both and focusedon direct experience, what they saw, pleasant, or unpleasant.
    Bonjour, Monsieur Courbet
  • Modern Art

    Modern Art
    Modern Art Era begins
    Honoré Daumier
    The Uprising c. 1860
  • French Impressionism

    French Impressionism
    Poppy Field (Argenteuil) (1873)
    Musee d'Orsay. By Claude Monet.
  • Impressionism Art

    Impressionism Art
    They painted people and things as solid colored objects. And also realized the color of light had a tremendous effect on the color of objects.
    The Gleaners (1857)
    Louvre Museum, Paris.
    By Jean-Francois Millet
  • Naive Art

    Naive Art
    Naïve art is any form of visual art that is created by a person who lacks the formal education and training that a professional artist undergoes.
    Henri Rousseau's The Repast of the Lion
  • Post-Impressionism

    Post-Impressionism
    Two Tahitian Women with Red Flowers
    (1899)
    In fine art, the term Post-Impressionism denotes the phase of modern art during which artists sought to progress beyond the narrow imitative style of Impressionism,
  • Art Nouveau

    Art Nouveau
    it promulgated the idea of art and design as part of everyday life.
    Art Nouveau Staircase (1893-7)
    Emile Tassel House, Brussels.
    Design by architect Victor Horta,
  • Classical Revival in Modern Art

    Classical Revival in Modern Art
    Large Bather (1921)
    Musee de l'Orangerie, Paris.
    By Pablo Picasso.
  • Expressionism

    Expressionism
    The art era expressionism, the the attitude or philosophy of art rather than a particular style.
    The Large Blue Horses (1911)
    Walker Art Centre, Minneapolis.
    By Franz Marc.
  • Cubism Art

    Cubism Art
    Cubism art was begun in 1907 by Picasso, who was joined by Georges Braque. They used Cezanne’s ideas building up a surface with small squarish brush strokes in their art.
    Portrait of Ambroise Vollard (1909)
    by Pablo Picasso.
  • Art Deco

    Art Deco
    Exemplified by the geometric designs of famous New York buildings
    AIG Building, New York (1932)
  • Surrealism

    Surrealism
    The Mystery and Melancholy of a Street
    (1914) By Giorgio de Chirico,
  • Socialist Realism

    Socialist Realism
    Migrant Mother (1936)
    Nipomo, California.
    Associated with interwar American art, which commented on social, economic and political conditions prevailing during the Depression era.
  • Abstract Expressionism

    Abstract Expressionism
    Woman V (1952). Willem De Kooning
  • Color Field Painting

    Color Field Painting
    Color Field painting is a style of abstract painting that emerged in New York City during the 1940s and 1950
    Rothko
  • Pop Art

    Pop Art
    Whaam! (1963) Roy Lichtenstein.
    Tate Collection, London.