Abstract Art
The meaning of ‘abstract’ in art has been much debated. In its general use, it can be taken to mean art that does not represent the visible, tangible world, in a mimetic or descriptive way. While it is generally identified as a Modernist phenomenon, with earlier forms of abstraction tending to be relegated as pattern making, an argument can be made for ritualistic forms that carry meaning, and whose function, therefore, is more than simply decorative.
Abstract Art in Pre-history
Knowth, Co. Meath. Orthostat 49
Knowth, Co. Meath. Orthostat 49: This abstracted face guards the entrance to the chamber at Knowth.
Courtesy of the Photographic Unit, Department of the Environment, Heritage and Local GovernmentKnowth, Co. Meath. Orthostat 49
Knowth, Co. Meath. Orthostat 49: This abstracted face guards the entrance to the chamber at Knowth.
Courtesy of the Photographic Unit, Department of the Environment, Heritage and Local GovernmentLoughcrew, Co. Meath Orthostat C8, Cairn T
Loughcrew, Co. Meath Orthostat C8, Cairn T: Some of the ornament at Loughcrew appears more naturalistic than the art found in the Boyne valley. Some designs look like simplified flowers.
Courtesy of the Photographic Unit, Department of the Environment, Heritage and Local GovernmentLoughcrew, Co. Meath Orthostat C8, Cairn T
Loughcrew, Co. Meath Orthostat C8, Cairn T: Some of the ornament at Loughcrew appears more naturalistic than the art found in the Boyne valley. Some designs look like simplified flowers.
Courtesy of the Photographic Unit, Department of the Environment, Heritage and Local GovernmentThe very earliest art to survive in Ireland dating to approximately 3,500BC could be described as abstract. Standard designs include spirals and zig-zags but other more unusual forms, such as flower-like motifs and even abstracted faces are sometimes found. This art is found mainly carved and picked into the structural stones of megalithic tombs and the pottery and other objects deposited within them. It is probable that similar designs would also have been found in paint, woodcarving and other materials which do not survive. Art of this type is also found in Iberia and Brittany , but the largest concentration is in the Boyne valley at prestigious sites such as Knowth, Newgrange and slightly further north at Loughcrew (all in Co. Meath). The location of this art, often concentrated in specific parts of tombs, suggests a ritualistic function, but the meaning of specific motifs remains open to speculation.
Decorated flint macehead, Knowth, Co Meath
The hole in this flint mace head is designed to take a shaft, but with the c-shaped scroll above has the appearance of a human face.
Copyright : National Museum of IrelandDecorated flint macehead, Knowth, Co Meath
The hole in this flint mace head is designed to take a shaft, but with the c-shaped scroll above has the appearance of a human face.
Copyright : National Museum of Ireland
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