Why every animator alive today is heir to the oldest human impulse on earth
Let me ask you something that nobody in any animation school ever asked you.
Why do humans animate?
Not how. Not what software. Why.
Because here is the truth that changes how you see this entire industry: animation did not begin with Walt Disney. It did not begin with computers. It did not even begin with film. It began thirty-five thousand years ago — on a cave wall, in what is now southern France.
The artists who painted the Lascaux and Chauvet caves were not primitive. They were sophisticated observers of the living world. And they painted animals with multiple pairs of legs — not because they could not count, but because they were trying to show something that a single, frozen image could not capture. They were trying to show motion.
They were animators. With pigment, fire, and stone.
Here is the remarkable part. When you hold a torch in front of those paintings and walk past them, the animals appear to run. The flickering firelight creates approximately twelve frames per second — the precise threshold at which the human brain perceives continuous motion rather than a sequence of stills. This is the persistence of vision, the foundational principle behind every film, every cartoon, every digital animation ever made. These cave artists discovered it thirty-five thousand years before the British physician Peter Mark Roget formally named and described it in 1824.
This was not accident. It was observation, intention, and execution. It was animation.
Now consider India. Something every Indian animation aspirant must know before they learn anything else.
The Konark Sun Temple in Odisha was built in the 13th century by King Narasimhadeva I. It is structured as a colossal chariot of the sun god Surya, with twenty-four wheels, each with twelve spokes — representing the twenty-four hours in a day, the twelve months of the year. The mathematics encoded in stone is already extraordinary. But look at one particular wheel more carefully.
One of those wheels documents the life of a woman from sunrise to sunset. Each spoke carries a distinct figurative pose — and these poses are not decorative. The body volume is maintained from pose to pose. The weight distribution is correct. The balance is anatomically true. These are key frames. Photograph each spoke, arrange them in sequence, and flip them — and you have a keyframe animation. Carved in stone. Seven hundred years before cinema.
This is not mythology. This is not poetry. This is animation. And it is from Odisha.
The impulse was not unique to India, either. Pharaoh Rameses II, around 1600 BC, constructed a temple with 110 columns, each bearing a progressively changing figure of a goddess. When charioteers rode past at speed, the goddess appeared to move — a zoetrope built at architectural scale, three millennia before the word existed. The ancient Greeks painted sequential figures on pottery. Spin the pot — get animation. In China, shadow puppetry used firelight and motion to tell stories as far back as the 2nd century BC.
Every civilisation. Every continent. Independently. Invented animation.
This is not coincidence. It is evidence of something hardwired into human consciousness. Our brains evolved to track motion because movement signals life — danger, opportunity, emotion, the presence of another being. Animation is not a technology. It is a biological imperative dressed in art.
Which brings us to one of the most remarkable observations ever made about Indian artistic tradition — and it came from an astrophysicist.
Carl Sagan, in his landmark 1980 television series Cosmos, paused his journey through the universe to speak about something he found in Hindu cosmology. He was struck — genuinely struck — by the fact that ancient Indian thinkers had conceived of a universe that expands, contracts, and is reborn in cycles of extraordinary duration. The Hindu concept of a Kalpa — one day in the life of Brahma — is approximately 4.32 billion years. Modern science places the age of the Earth at 4.5 billion years. The correspondence is not exact, but the order of magnitude is identical. No other ancient cosmological tradition came close.
But what Sagan said about the Nataraja is what belongs in this conversation.
The Nataraja — Shiva as the cosmic dancer — is one of the supreme achievements of Indian sculpture. In it, Shiva dances within a ring of fire, one foot raised, one hand holding a drum (the sound of creation), another holding flame (the force of destruction), a third gesturing protection, a fourth pointing downward toward liberation. The entire cosmos — its creation, sustenance, and dissolution — is expressed in a single frozen moment of motion.
















