Venus Aurignacian

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The Goddess Cult Venus figurines dating from 28.000 - 15.000 B.C.E. Ancient Art, Archaeology, Ancient Artefacts, Stonehenge, Stone Age, Ancient Artifacts, Ancient Civilizations, Ancient Goddesses, Goddess Sculpture
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The Goddess Cult Venus figurines dating from 28.000 - 15.000 B.C.E.
Female Figurine 23,000-21,000 BC Limestone #goddess Sculptures, Prehistoric, Petroglyphs, Tondo, Venus, Sanat, Ost, Figurines
Prehistoric Art:Prehistoric art
Female Figurine 23,000-21,000 BC Limestone #goddess
Earth Mother Fertility Goddesses (24,000–22,000 B.C.) Statue, Ancient Aliens, Ancient Mysteries, Deities
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Earth Mother Fertility Goddesses (24,000–22,000 B.C.)
Venus of Willendorf, 24,000 - 22,000 BC Pre History, Fotografie, Anthropomorphic, Prehistory, Kunst
Venus of Willendorf, 24,000 - 22,000 BC
Mother Goddess Terracotta statuette figure - circa 6000-5000 BC Neolitic Age, found Hacilar Höyük in Burdur, Western Anatolia - at the Florence archaeological Museum Ancient Statues, Neolithic
Mother Goddess Terracotta statuette figure - circa 6000-5000 BC Neolitic Age, found Hacilar Höyük in Burdur, Western Anatolia - at the Florence archaeological Museum
Clay Figurine 7.000 - 3.500 bc Pregnant woman and monogram signs Length (mm): 110 Width (mm): 38 Culture: Gradeshnitza via > europeanvirtualmuseum.net Clay Figurine
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Clay Figurine 7.000 - 3.500 bc Pregnant woman and monogram signs Length (mm): 110 Width (mm): 38 Culture: Gradeshnitza via > europeanvirtualmuseum.net
Venus of Willendorf. Carved out of limestone, 11cm tall, discovered at an excavation in Willendorf, Lower Austria on 7 August 1908. One of the many female statuettes, nicknamed "Venus" figurines, that were made out of stone, bone and ivory in the Upper Palaeolithic, 28.000 to 12.000 BCE. Venus Of Willendorf, Goddess, Ancient
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Venus of Willendorf. Carved out of limestone, 11cm tall, discovered at an excavation in Willendorf, Lower Austria on 7 August 1908. One of the many female statuettes, nicknamed "Venus" figurines, that were made out of stone, bone and ivory in the Upper Palaeolithic, 28.000 to 12.000 BCE.
Kostenki Venus 23 000 - 21 000 BC Limestone H 10.2 cm This figurine represents the Palaeolithic ‘Venus’, with overlarge breasts and belly. The faceless head bends towards the chest while the arms are pressed to the body with hands on the belly. Covering the surface of the head are rows of incisions indicating a hair style or cap. Relief work in the form of a tight plait convey a breast ornament tied up at the back. There are bracelets on the arms. Paleolithic Period, Sculptures Artistiques
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Kostenki Venus 23 000 - 21 000 BC Limestone H 10.2 cm This figurine represents the Palaeolithic ‘Venus’, with overlarge breasts and belly. The faceless head bends towards the chest while the arms are pressed to the body with hands on the belly. Covering the surface of the head are rows of incisions indicating a hair style or cap. Relief work in the form of a tight plait convey a breast ornament tied up at the back. There are bracelets on the arms.
Seated female, 7th–6th millennium b.c., Halaf period Mesopotamia or Syria Anthropologie, Ancient Near East, Metropolitan Museum Of Art, Metropolitan Museum
Seated female | Halaf | Halaf | The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Seated female, 7th–6th millennium b.c., Halaf period Mesopotamia or Syria
"Tel Halaf" Fertility Figurine As early as the 7th millennium BC, cultures in the Near East began to create organized settlements with well-developed religious and funerary practices. The Halaf culture of Anatolia (central Turkey) and northern Syria arose around 5000 BC and produced remarkable female figurines with distinctive fertility attributes. This statuette is seated with legs extended, her arms cradling her protruding breasts. Prehistoric Period, Neolithic Art, Ancient People
Tell Halaf Figurine | The Walters Art Museum
"Tel Halaf" Fertility Figurine As early as the 7th millennium BC, cultures in the Near East began to create organized settlements with well-developed religious and funerary practices. The Halaf culture of Anatolia (central Turkey) and northern Syria arose around 5000 BC and produced remarkable female figurines with distinctive fertility attributes. This statuette is seated with legs extended, her arms cradling her protruding breasts.
Thessaly 7,000 years ago. Buddha, Antiques, Ceramica, Sacred Feminine, Greek
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Thessaly 7,000 years ago.
Stylised female figurine, the so-called Venus of Savignano. Many of these statuettes are considered to have been used as fertility symbols. Country of Origin: Italy. Culture: Paleolithic. Date/Period: Aurignacian - Perigordian period c. 25,000 BC. Place of Origin: Savignano sul Punaro, Modena. Material/Size: Serpentine stone H=22cm. Credit Line: Werner Forman Archive/ Pigorini Museum of Prehistory and Ethnography, Rome Serpentine Stone, Paleolithic Art, Ancestral
Stylised female figurine, the so-called Venus of Savignano. Many of these statuettes are considered to have been used as fertility symbols. Country of Origin: Italy. Culture: Paleolithic. Date/Period: Aurignacian - Perigordian period c. 25,000 BC. Place of Origin: Savignano sul Punaro, Modena. Material/Size: Serpentine stone H=22cm. Credit Line: Werner Forman Archive/ Pigorini Museum of Prehistory and Ethnography, Rome
The Venus of Willendorf Age: Around 25,000 BCE Material: Oolitic Limestone Found: Willendorf (Austria) in 1908 Present Location: Naturhistorisches Museum in Vienna (Austria) Length: 10.6cm Width: 5.7cm Depth: 4.5cm
prehistoric art
The Venus of Willendorf Age: Around 25,000 BCE Material: Oolitic Limestone Found: Willendorf (Austria) in 1908 Present Location: Naturhistorisches Museum in Vienna (Austria) Length: 10.6cm Width: 5.7cm Depth: 4.5cm
The most famous early image of a human, a woman, is the so-called "Venus" of Willendorf, found in 1908 by the archaeologist Josef Szombathy...in an Aurignacian loess deposit near the town of Willendorf in Austria and now in the Naturhistorisches Museum, Vienna. History, Human Body, World History, Ideal Body, European, History Design
Venus de Willendorf
The most famous early image of a human, a woman, is the so-called "Venus" of Willendorf, found in 1908 by the archaeologist Josef Szombathy...in an Aurignacian loess deposit near the town of Willendorf in Austria and now in the Naturhistorisches Museum, Vienna.
Venus of Willendorf. Back view. c. 25000 BCE Limestone Paleolithic: Aurignacian Austria. Vienna. Naturhistorisches Museum. ©Kathleen Cohen pal00009 Museums, Goddesses, Art
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Venus of Willendorf. Back view. c. 25000 BCE Limestone Paleolithic: Aurignacian Austria. Vienna. Naturhistorisches Museum. ©Kathleen Cohen pal00009
3000-2000 BCE. Standing female figure,10 5/8 in., wearing a strap and a necklace, This shows the beginning of a long sculptural tradition in bronze age S.W. Arabia of extreme simplification and strict rectangular shape. Sandstone, quartzite. Stone Sculptures
Standing female figure wearing a strap and a necklace | Bronze Age | The Metropolitan Museum of Art
3000-2000 BCE. Standing female figure,10 5/8 in., wearing a strap and a necklace, This shows the beginning of a long sculptural tradition in bronze age S.W. Arabia of extreme simplification and strict rectangular shape. Sandstone, quartzite.
The 'Venus of Willendorf' is the name that was given to a female figurine that was found in a Aurignacian loess deposit near the town of Willendorf in Austria. She was carved from oolitic limestone and was colored with red orche. She measures 110 mm in height and is dated between 30,000 and 25,000 BC Wood Nymphs, Paleolithic Era
ANCIENT ART
The 'Venus of Willendorf' is the name that was given to a female figurine that was found in a Aurignacian loess deposit near the town of Willendorf in Austria. She was carved from oolitic limestone and was colored with red orche. She measures 110 mm in height and is dated between 30,000 and 25,000 BC
Venus of Willendorf. c. 25000 BCE European Paleolithic: Aurignacian Limestone Austria.
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Venus of Willendorf. c. 25000 BCE European Paleolithic: Aurignacian Limestone Austria.
✯ The Venus of Dolni Vestonice is a Venus figurine, a ceramic statuette of a nude female figure dated to 29 000 – 25 000 BP (Gravettian industry), which was found at a Paleolithic site in the Moravian basin south of Brno. This figurine, together with a few others from nearby locations, is the oldest known ceramic in the world, predating the use of fired clay to make pottery.✯ Statues
✯ The Venus of Dolni Vestonice is a Venus figurine, a ceramic statuette of a nude female figure dated to 29 000 – 25 000 BP (Gravettian industry), which was found at a Paleolithic site in the Moravian basin south of Brno. This figurine, together with a few others from nearby locations, is the oldest known ceramic in the world, predating the use of fired clay to make pottery.✯
The Venus of Menton is a figurine in yellow steatite (soapstone) from Grimaldi. It was found in the 1880s in the Barma Grande and acquired by Salomon Reinach in 1896 for the French MNA. Louis Alexandre Jullien discovered fifteen small sculptures from the excavations he led between 1883 and 1895 in the caves of Grimaldi, Liguria, Italy. In 1896, Jullien sold the ‘yellow steatite statuette’ to Salomon Reinach’s Musee des Antiquités Nationales in Saint Germain-en-Laye
The Venus of Menton is a figurine in yellow steatite (soapstone) from Grimaldi. It was found in the 1880s in the Barma Grande and acquired by Salomon Reinach in 1896 for the French MNA. Louis Alexandre Jullien discovered fifteen small sculptures from the excavations he led between 1883 and 1895 in the caves of Grimaldi, Liguria, Italy. In 1896, Jullien sold the ‘yellow steatite statuette’ to Salomon Reinach’s Musee des Antiquités Nationales in Saint Germain-en-Laye
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Stylised female figurine, the so called Venus of Savignano, Many of these statuettes are considered to have been used as fertility symbols. Italy. Paleolithic. Aurignacian Perigordian period c 25,000 BC. Savignano sul Punaro, Modena. Inspiration, Ishtar Goddess
Stylised female figurine, the so called Venus of Savignano, Many of...
Stylised female figurine, the so called Venus of Savignano, Many of these statuettes are considered to have been used as fertility symbols. Italy. Paleolithic. Aurignacian Perigordian period c 25,000 BC. Savignano sul Punaro, Modena.