Analytical Framework: Iconographic analysis using the Panofsky method (pre-iconographic description → iconographic analysis → iconological interpretation). Motif clustering analysis (MCA) was applied to 1,240 individual motifs across 45 sites.
The Schematic tradition is markedly distinct from its predecessor (Table 1). borneo schematic
| Feature | Naturalistic Tradition | Schematic Tradition | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Dominant Color | Red (hematite) | Black (charcoal/manganese), dark purple | | Subject | Fauna (bearded pig, banteng), hand stencils | Geometrics (zigzags, dots, concentric circles), anthropomorphic "stick" figures | | Scale | Large (≥50 cm) | Small (typically 5–20 cm) | | Execution | Sprayed, finger-painted, careful outline | Rapid brush stroke, repetitive, stippled | | Superimposition | Always below schematic layers | Above naturalistic (never the reverse) | | Feature | Naturalistic Tradition | Schematic Tradition
(Generated for Academic Purposes) Date: April 14, 2026 (2009)
Fage, L. H., & Chazine, J. M. (2009). Borneo, Memory of the Caves . Le Kalimanthrope.
The lattice/tapis motif echoes the woven patterns used in ritual cloths that contain protective spiritual power ( semangat ). Placing such patterns on cave walls may have "activated" the shelter as a ritual locus for rainmaking, head-hunting success, or agricultural fertility.