Prehistoric to 1000 BCE · Arabia · Central Asia · North Africa · East Africa
The earliest images of camels were not painted in palaces or illuminated in manuscripts — they were scratched into rock faces by people who lived and hunted alongside them.
Long before the camel was domesticated — before it became the engine of the Silk Road, the mount of the Magi, the subject of Ottoman manuscripts — it was a wild animal encountered at waterholes and engraved into stone by hunters who needed to capture its essence.
This exhibition gathers camel rock art from eight UNESCO-recognised and regionally significant sites across Arabia, North Africa, East Africa, and Central Asia. Each site represents an independent tradition, yet together they form a continuous 9,000-year record of human attention to this animal.
The oldest works here predate the domestication of the dromedary by thousands of years. They show us the camel as it was first known to humans: large, strange, powerful, and worth remembering.
The Jubbah rock art site in the Ha'il region of Saudi Arabia contains some of the oldest and most numerous camel petroglyphs in the world. Inscribed across sandstone outcroppings at the edge of the Nefud desert, the images were created by Neolithic communities who lived near what was then a freshwater lake — long since evaporated.
The dromedaries here are depicted in dynamic poses: running, rearing, being led by handlers. Some panels show camels alongside human figures, cattle, and ibex, suggesting a world in which the camel was already an integral — if not yet domesticated — presence in daily life.
The camel appears in rock art millennia before it appears in manuscripts, paintings, or coinage. This chronological priority matters. It means that the very first human impulse to record this animal was not symbolic or religious or commercial — it was something more immediate. People scratched the camel into stone because they saw it, because it was large and strange and worth the effort.
The sites in this exhibition span three continents and nearly nine thousand years. The oldest material — the cave paintings at Laas Geel in Somalia and the petroglyphs at Wadi Rum in Jordan — predates the domestication of the dromedary by thousands of years. These are images of wild animals, encountered at waterholes, perhaps hunted, certainly feared and respected.
By the third millennium BCE, something had shifted. The petroglyphs at Jubbah and Hima in Saudi Arabia — both now UNESCO World Heritage sites — begin to show camels alongside human figures. Some are being led. Some appear in what look like herding formations. The boundary between wild animal and domestic beast was dissolving, and the rock art records the transition with remarkable fidelity.
The Central Asian sites tell a parallel story with a different species. At Tamgaly in Kazakhstan and Saimaly-Tash in Kyrgyzstan, the two-humped Bactrian camel appears in Bronze Age petroglyphs carved by steppe peoples who would eventually domesticate it along the northern Silk Road. These images are geographically and species-specifically distinct from the Arabian tradition — a reminder that the camel's history is not one story but two, converging later at the great Central Asian trade crossroads.
What unites all the works in this exhibition is their medium: stone. Unlike painted manuscripts or fired ceramics, petroglyphs resist decay almost indefinitely. The marks made at Jubbah nine thousand years ago are, in a literal sense, still there. This exhibition is, in part, about the extraordinary durability of human attention.