The animals are more realistically drawn than the humans.
The Venus of Willendorf is a figurine made between about 28,000 and 25,000 BCE. The cave paintings of Lascaux are 17,000 years BP or before present time.
The hall of bulls lascaux is found in France and was made during the Paleolithic time while the Valtorata gorge is located in Spain and was made in Neolithic time period. Also Valtorta gorge has more drawing of humans than the hall of bulls.
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one used oil paint and the other used water colours
The former is to be looked at, the latter to be listened to.
Only one natural cave - the Grotte de Lascaux - plus the copy as the original is closed to all but serious research to protect the paintings. The plan I've seen shows the cave as a single passage with a branch off it but that might only be the decorated section. I don't know its true extent. By the way I'm not quite sure what your question means. A cave is a cave in the singular irrespective of its complexity and number of passages and chambers; although if is part of a system proven passably link two or more caves, they keep their original names as far as the junction between them.
In ancient Egypt, most paintings were made for ritual purposes, and they represented their subjects in symbolic ways. By contrast, most modern paintings are either lifelike representations of people and objects or abstract representations of the artists ideas.
The wall paintings in the Lascaux caves, dating back to approximately 17,000 years ago, primarily depict animals and hunting scenes, showcasing early humans' connection to nature and their reliance on animals for survival. In contrast, the Venus of Willendorf, a small statuette from around 25,000 years ago, emphasizes fertility and the female form, reflecting a different aspect of prehistoric life focused on femininity and perhaps fertility worship. While Lascaux's murals celebrate the hunt and the natural world, the Venus figurine highlights a cultural appreciation for femininity and reproduction. Both artifacts illustrate the diverse expressions of human experience and spirituality in prehistoric societies.
The key difference is that while Giotto was a painter, Machiavelli was a writer.
Wood idealized Midwestern values in his paintings; Miró depicted images from his imagination.
In a cave at Nerja at Malaga in Spain, about 42,000 years ago.