One thing that I love about art is the stories that it can tell. You can find stories about the subjects, about the artists, and about the culture that they live in. Sometimes the stories told are deliberate and factual. Sometimes the artist don’t even realize the stories they are telling. By looking at artwork there is so much that we can learn about our history, and about the history of others around us and others that came before us. I remember in my Art History classes thinking that studying Prehistoric art was one of the most boring lessons I had to sit through. I wanted to see beautiful, well developed paintings, not these cave scribbles and ugly statues. But what usually happens when you grow up is you realize the importance of this work and what you can learn from it.
Even though there is little still known about the purpose of these cave paintings from Lascaux, you can see the importance of hunting in their life. It is how they survived, what they did to live. 
c. 15000-10000 BC. Lascaux, France
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With the Venus of Willendorf, again we see how mere survival is a part of their culture. It is commonly thought that these statues represent fertility, or the ideal woman that would be able to reproduce.
Venus of Willendorf
c. 24,000-22,000 BCE
Oolitic limestone
43/8 inches (11.1 cm) high
(Naturhistorisches Museum, Vienna)
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I am sharing these because it is the beginning, it is our history as artists. It is where it all started from and now we have the tools to capture so much more. A wedding photographer captures what things are like at this point in history. What people wore, what was important to our culture. But most importantly, they capture an individuals family history, how two families joined as one, what specific people are important to them, and the emotions people were feeling on that day. Look at your images and think about what stories will be told because you were there.
Whitney Carlson