No one is exactly sure old this image is. Some estimate 2000, others 8000 years. It was found in Horseshoe Canyon, Utah and it represents a small detail of this mazing catalogue of our history.
Utah rock art was described in National Geographic magazine as a “wilderness Louvre,” a world-class outdoor art museum. The quality and quantity of Utah’s prehistoric rock art is unmatched anywhere.
Who created the rock art? While it is speculated that a petroglyph in the Moab area and a pictograph in Ferron Canyon, may represent work by Ice Age artists more than 10,000 years ago, the earliest rock art can be more safely attributed to the Archaic Culture of more recent times.
These people were probably responsible for the red-painted, mummy-shaped figures in eastern Utah known as the Barrier Canyon style as well as other (primarily abstract) rock art images found throughout the state.
The “No name – Hi” lives in between McDonald Creek and Book Cliffs near the Colorado-Utah state line.
- Long Sleeveless Pinafore Linen dress
- 100% OEKO-TEX® European Linen, 220 gram/sm, Washed
- Hand Made and Hand Painted
- Size: S – M (see the attached diagram)
- Dress Color: Baby Blue
- Art Color: Terracotta and White
- Dress weight (by feeling): Medium
- Has Pockets!!
- Length of the straps:
- Dress RAL code:
Find out more about Horseshoe Canyon Artworks HERE.