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OUR SAN HERITAGE The Western Cape,
particularly the mountainous region from the Cold Bokkeveld north through the
Cederberg to the Agter Pakhuis area, may have more rock paintings per square
kilometer than anywhere else in Southern Africa. In South Africa, rock art was
made by San hunter-gatherers and Khoekhoen pastoralists. Black farmers created
rock art of a different kind. The
creation of images on rocks has an extraordinarily long tradition in Southern
Africa and South Africa probably has the richest legacy of rock art in the
world.

The
art consists of both paintings and engravings. Engravings are generally found in
open-air sites in the interior of South Africa. The artists used several
techniques, either pecking (stippling) or cutting lines in the patina known as
fine line engravings. In contrast to the engravings, paintings are found in rock
shelters and shallow overhangs.

The materials used
to make these paintings were generally different kinds of minerals. Red is the
most commonly used colour and was made from ferric oxide and ochre of various
shades. Black pigment was prepared from charcoal and specularite. White, the
most ephemeral colour, was made from silica, china clay and gypsum. Other media
used by the San include plant sap, eggwhite and perhaps water. The paint was
applied with brushes made from reeds, feathers, quills or hair, or directly with
the fingers.

Southern
African rock art essentially contains a religious element. San religion, like
many others, used ritual practices to generate supernatural powers. The
paintings and engravings recorded the experiences of shamans or medicine men and
women in an altered state of conciousness (trance). They “became” animals in
order to enhance their power as healers or rainmakers, or to control game during
a hunt.
In
an altered state of consciousness, the shaman perceived images and believed he
was part of those images. During the first stage of the trance the shaman saw
patterns of light like grids, wavy lines, dots, vortices and zigzags. During the
second stage, animals or objects of significance were seen; the eland being
particularly important to the San. During the third stage of the trance all the
images from the previous stages are merged. All of these experiences are
depicted in San art and images of people with animal heads and hooves were
frequently recorded.
Paintings and engravings sometimes depict animals as part of the rainmaking
ritual, although the form of these animals varies. The most commonly depicted
animal in San art is the eland.
In the Cederberg and Warm Bokkeveld, paintings of elephants are common,
reflecting perhaps their importance to that area. Other animals also frequently
depicted in this area are rhebuck and hartebeest.

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