Abstract
Herzog similarly comments on the incomparable importance of the paintings: "It was not a primitive beginning or a slow evolution, it rather burst onto the scene like a sudden explosive event. "2 A century ago, T. S. Eliot in "Tradition and Individual Talent" (1919) similarly claimed that "art never improves" but springs into being fully formed, and appears in this form even as far back as the "rock drawing of the Magdalenian draughtsmen. [...]Chamber a rhinoceros appears with a long horn, and two further horns of the same shape and length appear layered in front of it, and four of these horns appear layered just behind it. If others with heavy wooden instruments pounded the ground to mimic fleeing horses or bison or reindeer, then these sounds would have been felt in the ground and heard echoing through the cave as a vast resonating chamber, deepening the immersive cinematic and virtual reality experience.