The early Neolithic period of the Breton peninsula is marked by the erection of stone blocks with symbolic purposes, linked to territories dedicated to the dead, to rites, or to architectural structures. On Belle-Île-en-Mer, these monuments are similar to those on the mainland but are fewer in number and have undergone destruction in later periods. As the island’s substrate lacks granite, a granite menhir, Jeanne de Runélo, standing over seven meters tall, was destroyed around 1830. Why did the Neolithic coastal peoples feel the need to import such heavy blocks to erect menhirs? In 2016, I visited the sites of destroyed menhirs on Belle-Île-en-Mer, removed a stone from the coast, and raised it on a Neolithic site where the original menhir had disappeared.
Natural shaped stone cut off from the continental crust rock and straightened up on a Neolithic site, video, photograph, chromogenic color print on paper
Stone : 66.8 x 41 x 31 cm. Photograph : 80 × 53,4 cm. Video : 11’00”
Stone cut off from Pointe du Skeul, Belle-Île-en-Mer (47.278745, -3.092628). Stone straightened up at the Neolithic Site Pierre branlante de Moulin Gouch, Belle-Île-en-Mer (47.305438, -3.146703)
Film : Zhao Fei. Post-production : Hu Jiaxing, Pan Xiangrong