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Certainly looks like the hunters painted in with the animals are a bit âlight in the loafersâ or are practicing ballet moves. Donât exactly look like the guys holding up the artisteâŠ
Yes, there are several cave sites where âhow did they get up there?â is relevant, but the real question is one that Wiley isnât even addressing in this strip.There are a number of locations of cave art that are in total darkness. There is no trace of soot on the ceiling that would be left by torches or oil lamps. How did they do it?And donât tell me that they washed the ceiling.
I hate to spoil the joke, but âHow did they get up thereâ is usually pretty simple. If you want to get higher, you climb a tree (or eat âmagic mushroomsâ, but that wonât work if you want to still see the art tomorrow.) If thereâs no tree in the cave, cut one down, trim the limbs to stubs long enough for foot and hand holds, and carry it where you need it. Now youâve invented the ladder, in the form that was universally used from pre-history up until lighter and more convenient factory-made ladders replaced it. The artist quite likely needs support from his buddies to haul that tree-ladder in and erect it, but once itâs set, thereâs only one guy working.
Where this wonât work is where thereâs no good footing for the ladder, but a human pyramid requires equally solid and much wider footings. If you find cave paintings in places with no place to set a tree ladder or rappel down to the site, either the cave changed in 25,000 years, or someone invented cantilevered scaffoldingâŠ
At least that art was WORTH supporting, as it was for many centuries since. Only in my lifetime has art become almost entirely done for shock value, and even PBS only does a few artistic things (usually from BBC) that donât simply promote their liberal views. THAT SAID, It WAS a great strip, Wiley!
This debunks the legend of the Attack of the 50 Foot Woman and the lesser known myth of the caveman who played the practical joke of flooding the cave, leaving only a raft and some useless brushes for paddles.
The exact same cartoon appeared in the British magazine Punch about 60 years ago. The caption read âThis will make them think either that we had a ladder or the floor subsided.â Iâm pretty sure the same anthology of Punch cartoons is in Mr. Wileyâs reference collection.
1. They made ladders. 2. In my back yard there were bears and rhinos, but a long time before Man came, the rhinos were gone. 3. They had glow sticks (with six legs) they had to keep shaking??
I first heard my little Michelangelo joke on TV many tears ago but I didnât credit the source. Is that plagiarism? I think it might have been Ted Baxter.
There is no shame in copying good work. But some people are dumb enough to copy the bad stuff. Iâve seen a lot of recycled jokes in the comics and elsewhere. Nothing wrong with it.
black_knight15_au about 13 years ago
Was hoping for the follow up to last Sundayâs âbefore Eveâ cartoon, but Wiley has proved himself to be âNon Sequelturâ.
Superfrog about 13 years ago
So this was the first pyramid?
Varnes about 13 years ago
What? No whales? But, seriously, I remember when supporting the arts was considered a good thingâŠItâs hell getting oldâŠ
pouncingtiger about 13 years ago
Caveman Michelangelo
jnik23260 about 13 years ago
Weâll think it was done by space aliens in their hovercraft!
V-Beast about 13 years ago
The women are off to the side laughing at them for not just using a very long paintbrush.
Proginoskes about 13 years ago
Extraterrestrials painted the pictures! Yeah!
Kvasir42 Premium Member about 13 years ago
They will think cavemen were extremely tall.
WCLamb about 13 years ago
Certainly looks like the hunters painted in with the animals are a bit âlight in the loafersâ or are practicing ballet moves. Donât exactly look like the guys holding up the artisteâŠ
roctor about 13 years ago
Wiley is standing on the shoulders of giants.
Nebulous Premium Member about 13 years ago
Yes, there are several cave sites where âhow did they get up there?â is relevant, but the real question is one that Wiley isnât even addressing in this strip.There are a number of locations of cave art that are in total darkness. There is no trace of soot on the ceiling that would be left by torches or oil lamps. How did they do it?And donât tell me that they washed the ceiling.
Bittermelon of Truth about 13 years ago
The Sistine Cave⊠By Grogangelo?
markmoss1 about 13 years ago
I hate to spoil the joke, but âHow did they get up thereâ is usually pretty simple. If you want to get higher, you climb a tree (or eat âmagic mushroomsâ, but that wonât work if you want to still see the art tomorrow.) If thereâs no tree in the cave, cut one down, trim the limbs to stubs long enough for foot and hand holds, and carry it where you need it. Now youâve invented the ladder, in the form that was universally used from pre-history up until lighter and more convenient factory-made ladders replaced it. The artist quite likely needs support from his buddies to haul that tree-ladder in and erect it, but once itâs set, thereâs only one guy working.
Where this wonât work is where thereâs no good footing for the ladder, but a human pyramid requires equally solid and much wider footings. If you find cave paintings in places with no place to set a tree ladder or rappel down to the site, either the cave changed in 25,000 years, or someone invented cantilevered scaffoldingâŠ
chuckercan about 13 years ago
They will wonder on what continent there would have been bears and rhinos
vldazzle about 13 years ago
At least that art was WORTH supporting, as it was for many centuries since. Only in my lifetime has art become almost entirely done for shock value, and even PBS only does a few artistic things (usually from BBC) that donât simply promote their liberal views. THAT SAID, It WAS a great strip, Wiley!
rockngolfer about 13 years ago
Hurry up! The Rapa Nui need a cave painted and they pay for travel time.
palos about 13 years ago
This debunks the legend of the Attack of the 50 Foot Woman and the lesser known myth of the caveman who played the practical joke of flooding the cave, leaving only a raft and some useless brushes for paddles.
route66paul about 13 years ago
The paintings are high up on the wall because that was where the floor was back then. 5000 years on running water could have moved 8-20 ft of floor.
YatInExile about 13 years ago
I hope those guys rotate. Iâd hate to be the guy on the bottom all the time.
Mayor Snorkum about 13 years ago
The exact same cartoon appeared in the British magazine Punch about 60 years ago. The caption read âThis will make them think either that we had a ladder or the floor subsided.â Iâm pretty sure the same anthology of Punch cartoons is in Mr. Wileyâs reference collection.
MotherOfMoses about 13 years ago
That explains the pyramids, their builders just wanted to mystify us.
chuckayl about 13 years ago
This is really meaningful to someone who has just finished âThe Painted Cavesâ by Jean Auel.
Wiley creator about 13 years ago
markmoss1 said, âI hate to spoil the joke, but âŠâ
Who then proceeds to spoil the joke with a long, technically literal analysis. SighâŠ.
Dtroutma about 13 years ago
1. They made ladders. 2. In my back yard there were bears and rhinos, but a long time before Man came, the rhinos were gone. 3. They had glow sticks (with six legs) they had to keep shaking??
dabugger about 13 years ago
thatâs no way to get highâŠ.
Lionhearted about 13 years ago
And Michelangelo thought he had it tough!
Lionhearted about 13 years ago
If the artist awoke to find that it was only a dream, wouldit be considered a âpigment of his imaginationââ?
eaglegrafix about 13 years ago
I knew it! I knew it! And they tried to make me think that the cave man knew how to build a scaffold.
Dry and Dusty Premium Member about 13 years ago
I KNEW IT!
thombluemel Premium Member about 13 years ago
Wiley,
This is a MASTERPIECE!
Fan oâ Lio. about 13 years ago
It took Michelangelo 4 years to paint the ceiling of the Sistine chapel â good thing it didnât a second coat.
Fan oâ Lio. about 13 years ago
I first heard my little Michelangelo joke on TV many tears ago but I didnât credit the source. Is that plagiarism? I think it might have been Ted Baxter.
Fan oâ Lio. about 13 years ago
There is no shame in copying good work. But some people are dumb enough to copy the bad stuff. Iâve seen a lot of recycled jokes in the comics and elsewhere. Nothing wrong with it.
fritzoid Premium Member about 13 years ago
A salient quote from Picasso that I actually came across today for the first time:âGood Taste is the enemy of Creativity.â
Alms4Thorby about 13 years ago
At least the critic wonât be able to urinate on it, as in âHistory of the World, Pt Iâ.