, the earliest discovered use of ceramics (29,000 – 25,000 BCE) The majority of Venus figurines are depictions of women, and follow artistic conventions of the times. Most of the figurines display the same body shape with the widest point at the abdomen and the female reproductive organs exaggerated. Oftentimes other details, such as the head and limbs, are neglected or absent which leads the figure to be abstracted to the point of simplicity. The heads are often of relatively small size and devoid of detail. Some may represent pregnant women, while others show no indication of pregnancy. The
Venus of Willendorf and the
Venus of Laussel (a
rock relief rather than a figurine) bear traces of having been externally covered in
red ochre. The significance of this is not clear, but is traditionally assumed to be religious or ritual in nature. Some human bodies from the
Palaeolithic era are found similarly covered, so it is assumed this colour had a significant meaning in their culture even though we do not know what. All generally accepted Palaeolithic female figurines are from the
Upper Palaeolithic. Although they were originally mostly considered part of the
Aurignacian culture, the majority are now associated with the
Gravettian and
Solutrean cultures. In these periods, the more rotund figurines are predominant. Within the
Magdalenian cultures, the forms become finer with more detail and the styling of said figures started to become similar within areas of close contact. ==Interpretation==