The National Gallery will stage the first major UK exhibition devoted to Francisco de Zurbarán (1598–1664) next spring, ...
The 67,800-year-old hand stencil looks like a claw—and provides new clues about early human cognition and the migration to ...
Art Gallery of Ontario senior curator John Zeppetelli resigned after a Nan Goldin acquisition failed due to her support of Palestine ...
Byzantine art had a significant impact on the Italian Renaissance and the evolution of the cultural boom of the early modern ...
An ancient handprint in a cave on an Indonesian island may be the oldest known rock art, created at least 67,800 years ago.
A hand stencil left on an Indonesian cave wall at least 67,800 years ago may reveal how and when ancient humans reached a lost continent known as Sahul that once linked Australia with southeast Asia.
The prehistoric artist likely created the image by spraying ochre mixed with water over a hand flattened on the wall of a ...
The hand stencil is more than 1,000 years older than the previous earliest evidence of rock art.