Resource Spotlight | “The Commonality of Humans through Art: How Art Connects Mankind through the Ages” — Created and Edited by Stuart Handler

 

Statuette
Quimbaya culture, Colombia
200-1000 CE
Gold
Museum of the Americas, Madrid, Spain

 
 
 

The Commonality of Humans through Art

How Art Connects Mankind through the Ages

 

Created and Edited by Stuart Handler

 
 
 
 

Published by Paul Holberton Publishing.

 
 

The Commonality of Humans through Art: How Art Connects Mankind through the Ages explores how art has linked different cultures over the past 30,000 years. Organized thematically rather than chronologically or geographically, it traces how all humans are connected from birth to death. Ten leading scholars offer essays on how the language of art has been used by cultures to explain human behavior. The book begins with a discussion of the brain and art, aesthetics and human cultures, and creation myths. With these important subjects as a foundation, it moves into explorations of lived experiences: motherhood and the family, the world around us, conflict and warfare, portraying ourselves and others, sickness and healing, religion and rituals, and death. Each chapter is illustrated by outstanding artworks showing the commonality between cultures as they expressed their lives to their own people and those who followed them. 

The essays are written to the lay reader so the book can be a beautiful showcase on a coffee-table, an important art reference book in a library, or an introductory textbook in archaeology, cultural anthropology, and art history classes.

 

Contributors

Dahlia W. Zaidel is adjunct professor of behavioral neuroscience, department of psychology, and member of the Brain Research Institute, University of California, Los Angeles

Wilfried van Damme is an art historian, anthropologist and author of many scholarly articles on aesthetics from an intercultural and interdisciplinary perspective

Barbara C. Sproul is former chair of the department of religion at Hunter College, CUNY, and author of Primal Myths: Creation Myths Around the World

Herbert M. Cole is professor emeritus of art history at the University ol California, Santa Barbara, and author of Maternity: Mothers and Children in the Arts of Africa

Lark E. Mason is an expert on Chinese art and antiquities, and formerly a senior vice-president at Sotheby’s in charge of the Chinese Works of Art Department

David H. Dye is professor of archaeology and faculty advisor at the University of Memphis and author of War Paths, Peace Paths

John F. Scott is professor emeritus of art history at the University of Florida and author of Latin American Art: Ancient to Modern

Todd J. Pesek, MD is a physician practicing preventive, integrative, holistic healthcare and founding director of the Center for Healing Across Cultures

Alex W. Barker is director of the Arkansas Archaeological Survey, University of Arkansas System and former president of the American Anthropological Association

Robert B. Pickering is professor emer-itus of anthropology and founding director of the Museum Science & Management program at the University of Tulsa

 
 

Selected works from The Commonality of Humans through Art

Sistine Chapel
Partial view showing ceiling and west wall behind the altar
Michelangelo Buonarroti (Italy, 1475 – 1564)
1508 – 1512 (ceiling), 1534 – 1541 (west wall)
Fresco
Vatican Palace, Vatican City

Plaque
Kingdom of Benin, Nigeria
1550 – 1600
Copper alloy
17 15/16 × 13.75 × 3.5 in., 45.6 × 35 × 8.9 cm
Nigeria

Las Limas Figure
Olmec Culture, Veracruz, Mexico
1000-600 BCE
Greenstone
21.65 in. high, 55 cm
Xalapa Museum of Anthropology, Veracruz, Mexico

Mars, the Roman God of War
Roman culture, Italy
100-200 CE
Marble
141.7 in., 360 cm
Capitoline Museums, Rome, Italy

Pendant in the Form of a Kui-Dragon
China
Eastern Zhou dynasty, Warring States period, 500-300 BCE
Jade
5/16 × 5 13/16 in., 0.8 × 14.8 cm
Saint Louis Art Museum
Gift of Leona J. Beckmann

Lidded Polychrome Effigy Vessel
Maya culture, Mexico
Early Classic period, 250 – 450 CE
Terracotta
9 in., 22.86 cm
Private Collection

Disk Pin Showing a Woman Giving Birth Between Two Antelopes
Luristan, Iran
Iranian bronze age, 1500-650 BCE
Bronze
Louvre Museum, Paris, France

Kroisos Kouros
Funerary statue found on the grave of Kroisos Attic culture, Greece
530 BCE
Marble
National Archaeological Museum of Athens, Greece

Fertility Figure
Halaf culture, Mesopotamia
6000 – 5100 BCE
Terracotta
Louvre Museum, Paris

The Lion-Human of Hohlenstein-Stadel
40,0000 – 35,000 BCE
Mammoth ivory
11.06 in., 28.1 cm
Museum Ulm, Germany

Prancing Horse
China
1 – 200 CE
Earthenware with traces of pigment
42 × 36 1/2 × 11 1/2 in., 106.68 × 92.71 × 29.21 cm
Minneapolis Museum of Art
Gift of Ruth and Bruce Dayton

Calima Childbirth Figure
Colombia
200 BCE-600 CE
Terracotta
9 ½ in. high, 24.13 cm
The Stuart Handler Collection

Rangi and Papa in Sexual Union
Maori culture, New Zealand
1870-1879
Wood
Auckland Museum, New Zealand

Laocoön and His Sons
Copy after a Hellenistic original found in the baths of Trajan, Rome, Italy, in 1506
40 – 30 BCE
Marble
8 feet, 2.4 meters
Museo Pio-Clementino, Octagon, Laocoön Hall
Vatican Museums, Vatican City

Seated Female Figure with Bowl (overleaf)
Colima culture, Coahuayana Style, Protoclassic
West Mexico
100 BCE – 250 CE
Terracotta
22 1/2 in., 57.15 cm
The Stuart Handler Collection

Dakini Dancing
Nepal
1600 – 1800
Gilded bronze
7 1/4 × 5 in., 18.42 × 12.7 cm
Asian Art Museum, San Francisco
The Avery Brundage Collection

Female Figure Holding Infant
Cyprus
Late Cypriot II, 1450 – 1200 BCE
Terracotta
7.6 × 1.7 × 2.4 in., 19.20 × 4.20 × 6.20 cm
British Museum, London, England

Mayapan Figural Censer
Maya culture, Yucatan, Mexico
1200 – 1450
Terracotta
26 × 12 × 16 in., 66.04 × 30.48 × 40.64 cm
Private Collection

Snake Goddess of Crete
Palace of Knossos, Crete
1650-1550 BCE
Terracotta
Heraklion Archaeological Museum, Greece

Paleolithic Paintings
Cave of Altamira
Santillana del Mar, Cantabria, Spain

Two-Figure Female
Cycladic culture, Cyclades
3200 – 2200 BCE
Marble
18.35 in., 46.6 cm
Private Collection

Monolith of Tlaltecuhtli
Aztec culture, Tenochtitlan, Mexico
1502
Terracotta
13.9 × 11.11 feet, 4.19 × 3.62 meters
Museum of the Templo Mayor, Mexico City

Chimera of Arezzo
Estruscan culture, Italy
400 BCE
Bronze
30.9 in., 78.5 cm
National Archaeological Museum, Florence, Italy

Figure of a Lord
Maya culture, Jaina Island
Burial site, Mexico
500 – 950 CE
Terracotta
11 3/8 in., 28.9 cm
Private Collection
Photo courtesy of Sotheby’s, New York

Man Carrying a Trophy Head
Nazca culture, Peru
100 BCE - 800 CE
Terracotta
Museum zu Allerheiligen Schaffhausen, Switzerland

Human Figure
Ain Ghazal, Amman, Jordan
Neolithic period, 7200 – 6500 BCE
Plaster and asphalt
Louvre Museum, Paris, France

War God Kūka’ilimoku
Kona style, Hawaii
1790 – 1810
Breadfruit tree wood
105.12 × 27.17 × 21.65 in., 267 × 69 × 55 cm
British Museum, London, England

Griffin Protome
Greece
Ionian period, 625 – 575 BCE
Bronze
5 1/2 in., 13.9 cm
Cleveland Museum of Art
The Charles W. Harkness Endowment Fund

Komoku-ten, Guardian of the West
Japan
Kamakura period, 1183 – 1333
Wood, polychrome with gilt, crystal-inlaid eyes
26 × 13 × 7 1/2 in., 66 × 33 × 19 cm
National Museum of Asian Art, Washington, DC

“Standard of Ur”
Sumerian culture, Mesopotamia
First Dynasty of Ur, 2500 BCE
Wood, inlaid with a mosaic of shell, red limestone, and lapis lazuli
8.50 × 19.50 in., 21.50 × 49.53 cm
The British Museum, London, England

Feather Cloak
Maui, Hawaiian Islands
Collected 1842
Plant fiber, bird feathers, net textile
Pitt Rivers Museum
University of Oxford, England

Oni Figure
Ita Yemoo, Nigeria
1300-1400
Brass
18 9/16 in., 47.15 cm
Museum of Ife Antiquities, Ife, Nigeria

Ballet Dancer
Pablo Picasso (Spain, 1881-1973)
1954
Lithograph
12 3/16 × 8 11/16 in., 31 × 22 cm
Museum of Modern Art, New York
Gift of Mrs. Bertha M. Slattery

Vishnu as Universal Man
Jaipur, Rajasthan, India
1810
Watercolor on paper
15 × 11 in., 38.5 × 28 cm
Victoria and Albert Museum, London, England
Photo: Val McG, Flickr

 
 

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