Art has accompanied humans practically forever, and its first manifestations can be found in the prehistoric period. These were primarily small, mobile sculptures, as well as rock art, including carvings and cave paintings. Humans were usually depicted imprecisely and incompletely, while animals were much more elaborate. In addition to animal silhouettes, human handprints were also a common motif. Our prehistoric ancestors typically used charred sticks, stones, or various colored clays.

Description of the game:
We place our hand on the paper and spray diluted paint to create its outline. We cut out animal shapes from cardboard and spray paint again to create cave drawings.
Fun fact:
Our ancestors also used colored rocks, which they crushed into a powder. They mixed the resulting pigment with their own saliva and blew it onto the wall, achieving the effect we achieve with sprinklers.
- A large sheet of paper (gray paper works great as a background imitating a cave wall)
- Sprayers with thinned paint or water colored with crepe paper/dye
- Cardboard
- Scissors
- Coal






Podziel się:
Aboriginal Art: Dot Painting
Van Gogh's Starry Night