| ▲ | ljf 4 hours ago | |
Stunning, and amazing to consider that these were painted by firelight/flaming torch. If you've not watched the Herzog classic "Cave of Forgotten Dreams" - I highly highly recommend it - the paintings are amazing. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cave_of_Forgotten_Dreams I was recently remembering my son's obsession with trains, buses and dustbin lorries when he was 2 to 5 - a friend tried to explain it as akin the the passion people would have felt for mega-fauna of the past. Did children of the cave-ages obsess over mammoths in the way he did over our local bus? | ||
| ▲ | slg an hour ago | parent | next [-] | |
>If you've not watched the Herzog classic "Cave of Forgotten Dreams" - I highly highly recommend it - the paintings are amazing. Especially if you have a chance to see it in 3D and/or on a big screen. The paintings incorporate the curves and contours of the cave walls to represent things like the bulging of muscles or even to simulate movement and that's difficult to convey in 2D. They did a remaster and IMAX re-release earlier this year and seeing it that way makes the images even more magical. | ||
| ▲ | rigonkulous 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |
>Stunning, and amazing to consider that these were painted by firelight/flaming torch. I could imagine the coals, not quite so much flame any more, soft and still in the windless depths, casting a warm glow for eyes to adjust in sanctity, so that the hands could find the lines in the mind and put them out on the wall. Just a fantastic moment in time, echoing on throughout history. | ||