Venus of Galgenberg made of green serpentine 30, for article on Venus of Galgenberg

Ice Age humans carved the Venus of Galgenberg, one of the world’s oldest sculptures.

Sometime around 34,000 B.C.E., a person living in what is now central Austria sat down with a piece of shiny green serpentine stone and shaped it into a small human figure. The result — a 7.2-centimeter statuette now known as the Venus of Galgenberg — is one of the oldest known three-dimensional works of art ever found, and it has been striking viewers with its quiet energy ever since it was unearthed in 1988.

Key findings

  • Venus of Galgenberg: The figurine dates to approximately 36,000 years ago, placing it firmly in the Aurignacian era — one of the earliest periods of documented symbolic human culture in Europe.
  • Serpentine sculpture: The statuette was carved from locally sourced green serpentine rock, suggesting the maker had both material knowledge of the surrounding landscape and the skill to work a relatively hard stone.
  • Dancing pose figurine: Unlike many Venus figurines that emphasize static or seated forms, the Galgenberg figure appears to be mid-movement, earning it the affectionate nickname “Fanny” after 19th-century Austrian ballerina Fanny Elssler.

What the Venus of Galgenberg tells us

The figurine was discovered near Stratzing, Austria, not far from the site where the more famous Venus of Willendorf was later found. The two objects now share a display cabinet at the Natural History Museum in Vienna — a pairing that underscores how active this stretch of the Danube Valley appears to have been as a center of early human symbolic expression.

At just 10 grams, the Venus of Galgenberg is small enough to hold in a closed fist. Yet the craftsmanship it represents is anything but casual. Aurignacian toolmakers were already producing blades, bone points, and personal ornaments across a wide arc of Europe and western Asia. The Galgenberg figurine adds sculpture-in-the-round to that list — evidence that the capacity for representational art was not a late development but an early and persistent feature of modern human cognition.

The choice of green serpentine is worth pausing on. This is not a soft or easily worked material. Someone selected it deliberately, likely because of its appearance — a glittering, almost translucent green that would have looked striking by firelight. That choice points toward an aesthetic sensibility, a sense that the material itself carried meaning.

Aurignacian culture and the spread of symbolic thought

The Aurignacian period, roughly 43,000 to 26,000 B.C.E., marks one of the most significant transitions in the human story. Across Europe and the Near East, populations of anatomically modern humans were producing objects that served no obvious survival function — cave paintings, personal ornaments, musical instruments, and figurines like this one.

The Aurignacian cultural tradition appears to have spread rapidly as modern humans moved into Europe, likely interacting with — and eventually replacing — Neanderthal populations who had lived there for hundreds of thousands of years. Some researchers believe Neanderthals may have had their own symbolic practices, which complicates any simple narrative of “modern humans arrive, art begins.” The full picture remains an active area of research.

What is clear is that figurines like the Venus of Galgenberg were not isolated experiments. Similar objects appear across a vast geographic range, from the Swabian Jura caves of southwestern Germany — where the Venus of Hohle Fels, possibly even older, was found — to sites stretching across France and into Russia. Whether these figurines shared a common symbolic meaning or were independently invented in different communities remains unknown. But their concentration in time suggests something was happening across human populations simultaneously.

Lasting impact

The Venus of Galgenberg did not directly cause anything that came later. No civilization traces its origin to this small green stone. But objects like it tell us something essential about the kind of animal we are.

The capacity for art — for making something that represents an idea, a body, a spirit, a story — is not a byproduct of civilization. It appears to be foundational to it. Every subsequent tradition of visual art, from the painted ceilings of ancient Egypt to the murals of Teotihuacan to the paintings of the Italian Renaissance, draws on the same underlying human ability that someone exercised in the Danube Valley 36,000 years ago.

The figurine also raises a question that researchers are only beginning to take seriously: who made it? For most of the 20th century, Venus figurines were interpreted almost exclusively through a male gaze — objects of desire, fertility symbols made by men. More recent scholarship has challenged that assumption, suggesting that many such figurines may have been made by women, for purposes that had little to do with male representation of the female body. The Galgenberg figurine’s dancing pose — dynamic, mobile, individuated — fits uncomfortably in either a simple fertility-symbol or male-gaze framework.

Blindspots and limits

The archaeological record for this period is fragmentary by nature. Organic materials — wood, fiber, hide — do not survive 36,000 years, which means we see only the most durable fraction of what Aurignacian people created. It is entirely possible, even likely, that the Venus of Galgenberg represents one surviving artifact from a much richer tradition of art-making that has left no trace.

We also do not know who specifically made the figurine, what community they belonged to, what the object meant to them, or whether “Venus figurine” — a category invented by 19th-century European archaeologists — captures anything meaningful about how these objects actually functioned. The name “Fanny,” charming as it is, says more about 19th-century Austrian culture than about the Ice Age world in which this object was born.

The Natural History Museum in Vienna continues to house and study both the Galgenberg and Willendorf figurines, and ongoing analysis may yet reveal more about the people who made them. For now, the figurine stands — or rather, dances — as a reminder that the impulse to make something beautiful is very, very old.

Read more

For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Venus of Galgenberg

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