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Painting by Emmanuel Benner From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A Family in the Stone Age (French: Une famille à l'âge de pierre) is a 1892 oil on canvas painting by the Academic artist Emmanuel Benner, now in the Unterlinden Museum in Colmar, Alsace, France (inventory number 88.RP.24).[2][3]
A Family in the Stone Age | |
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French: Une famille à l'âge de pierre | |
Artist | Emmanuel Benner |
Year | 1892 |
Medium | oil paint on canvas |
Movement | Academic art History painting |
Subject | A scene from Neolithic Europe. |
Dimensions | 110 cm × 147 cm (43 in × 58 in)[1] |
Location | Unterlinden Museum, Colmar, France |
Accession | 1907 |
The painting was exhibited at the 1892 Salon de Paris (catalog #122), under the French title L’alerte ; âge de pierre (The Alarm ; The Stone Age).[4]
Like Benner's earlier Lakeside Dwelling, the painting depicts a scene from life in prehistoric times; here the artist shows three generations of a family of cave dwellers facing the threat of a bear. The family is composed of four people, the father, who is aiming at the bear with his bow and arrow, a mother, a child, and an old man, probably the child's grandfather. They are all dressed in a primitive way, covered in animal skins, and the child, who is crouching in the ground, is entirely naked. The woman has her breasts exposed and is holding a club. The old man is bald and bearded, and is kneeling, while he watches the scene.
The painting was donated to the museum by the artist's family, including his nephew, painter Many Benner.[1]
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