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Article contents
Alpine rock art: then and now, and into the future?
Review products
ValerieLester. 2018. Marvels: the life of Clarence Bicknell—botanist, archaeologist, artist. Kibworth Beauchamp: Matador; 978-1-7890-1494-5 £25.
AlbertoMarretta. 2018. La roccia 12 di Seradina 1: documentazione, analisi e interpretazione di un capolavro dell'arte rupestre alpina. Capo di Ponte: Edizioni del Parco di Seradina-Bedolina; 978-88-941252-0-7.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 September 2019
Extract
Rock art in the Alps, centred on just two expansive sites, complements the many Scandinavian sites as a major source for open-air art in later European prehistory. A revelatory biography of one of the pioneering researchers there, published simultaneously with a superb monograph on a single rich surface of Alpine art, prompts this review of how we have studied, how we presently study and how we may come to study that art.
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- Review Article
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- Copyright
- Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd, 2019
References
Avery, G. 2016. Clarence Bicknell's botanical exchanges. Available at: https://www.clarencebicknell.com/images/downloads_news/clarence_bicknell_botanical_exchanges_avery.pdf (accessed 13 February 2019).Google Scholar
Brunner-Traut, E. 1974. Epilogue; aspective, in Heinrich Schäfer Principles of Egyptian art (translated and edited by John Baines): 424–43. Oxford: Clarendon.Google Scholar
Chippindale, C. 1984. Clarence Bicknell: archaeology and science in the 19th century. Antiquity 58: 185–93. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003598X0005626XGoogle Scholar