๐จ Chapter 01 ยท Topic 01 ยท Visual Arts
Bhimbetka Rock Shelters
UNESCO World Heritage Site, location, discovery, periods of paintings, themes, pigments, and significance in Indian art history โ complete UPSC & PSC notes.
๐ Location & Discovery
- Located in the Vindhya ranges, about 45 km south of Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh
- Situated in the Ratapani Wildlife Sanctuary
- Discovered by archaeologist V.S. Wakankar in 1957โ58 while travelling by train
- The name “Bhimbetka” derives from “Bhima Baithaka” โ “the sitting place of Bhima” (from the Mahabharata)
- Declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2003
- Contains over 700 rock shelters, of which about 400 contain paintings
- Evidence of human habitation from the Lower Palaeolithic period (about 100,000 years ago) to the early historic period
- Represents the longest continuous record of human habitation in India
โญ UNESCO Significance: Bhimbetka was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2003 under criteria (iii) and (v) โ bearing exceptional testimony to a cultural tradition and representing outstanding examples of human interaction with the natural environment. It is one of the oldest known rock art sites in the world and provides a continuous record of human life spanning over 100,000 years.
๐จ Periods of Paintings
| Period | Age | Characteristics |
|---|---|---|
| Period I (Upper Palaeolithic) | ~30,000โ10,000 BCE | Large animals (bison, tigers, rhinos) in green and dark red; dynamic figures; outline style |
| Period II (Mesolithic) | ~10,000โ6,000 BCE | Most prolific period; smaller figures; hunting scenes; community life; red, white, yellow pigments |
| Period III (Chalcolithic) | ~6,000โ3,000 BCE | Evidence of contact with agricultural communities; geometric patterns; pottery motifs |
| Period IVโV (Early Historic) | ~1,000 BCEโ200 CE | Schematic figures; religious symbols; riders on horseback; writing-like symbols |
| Period VIโVII (Medieval) | ~200โ1,400 CE | Geometric designs; decorative patterns; later additions over earlier paintings |
๐๏ธ Themes & Subjects
- Animals โ bison, tigers, lions, elephants, deer, boar, crocodiles, lizards; depicted with great naturalism
- Hunting scenes โ hunters with bows, arrows, spears; traps and snares
- Community life โ dancing, music, childbirth, burial, religious ceremonies
- Battle scenes โ warriors with weapons; conflict between groups
- Geometric patterns โ dots, circles, spirals, lattice patterns (later periods)
- Superimposition โ later paintings painted over earlier ones; provides chronological evidence
- The “Zoo Rock” โ a famous shelter with numerous animal paintings
๐จ Pigments & Techniques
- Colours used: red (haematite/iron oxide), white (limestone/gypsum), yellow (ochre), green (chalcedony), black (charcoal/manganese oxide)
- Red is the most common colour โ derived from haematite (iron ore)
- Pigments were mixed with animal fat, plant sap, or water to create paint
- Applied using fingers, twigs, brushes made from animal hair or plant fibres
- The paintings have survived due to the chemical composition of the rock (quartzite) and the sheltered location of the caves
- Some paintings show X-ray style โ internal organs of animals depicted
๐ Mesolithic Period โ Most Important: The Mesolithic period (Period II) produced the most numerous and varied paintings at Bhimbetka. This period shows a shift from large animal paintings to smaller, more dynamic scenes of human activity โ hunting, dancing, community gatherings. The paintings reflect a hunter-gatherer society transitioning toward settled life. Red ochre was the dominant pigment.
โ Revision Checklist โ Bhimbetka
โ
Bhimbetka = Vindhya ranges = 45 km south of Bhopal = Madhya Pradesh
โ Discovered by V.S. Wakankar in 1957โ58
โ UNESCO World Heritage Site = 2003
โ 700+ rock shelters; 400+ contain paintings
โ Longest continuous record of human habitation in India
โ Period I (Upper Palaeolithic) = large animals in green and dark red
โ Period II (Mesolithic) = most prolific = hunting scenes + community life
โ Red (haematite) = most common pigment
โ Themes = animals, hunting, community life, battle scenes, geometric patterns
โ “Zoo Rock” = famous shelter with numerous animal paintings
โ Name = “Bhima Baithaka” = sitting place of Bhima (Mahabharata)
โ Discovered by V.S. Wakankar in 1957โ58
โ UNESCO World Heritage Site = 2003
โ 700+ rock shelters; 400+ contain paintings
โ Longest continuous record of human habitation in India
โ Period I (Upper Palaeolithic) = large animals in green and dark red
โ Period II (Mesolithic) = most prolific = hunting scenes + community life
โ Red (haematite) = most common pigment
โ Themes = animals, hunting, community life, battle scenes, geometric patterns
โ “Zoo Rock” = famous shelter with numerous animal paintings
โ Name = “Bhima Baithaka” = sitting place of Bhima (Mahabharata)