Tom Björklund
@tombjorklundart.bsky.social
1.3K followers 110 following 25 posts
Visual artist, paleopainter.
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tombjorklundart.bsky.social
One of the illustrations I made for the article by Tommaso Mori et al. on cranial modification in stone age Italy.
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
The event takes place in north-western Italy near the Arene Candide cave over twelve thousand years ago. A young girl holds a toddler firmly in her arms while an adult woman tightly binds the child’s head with the aim of influencing how the child’s skull will develop.
tombjorklundart.bsky.social
House sparrow. World Sparrow Day was celebrated yesterday (march 20), emphasising the important role sparrows have in their ecosystems, and sadly, also a reminder of the dramatic decline of sparrow populations basically everywhere.
A male House sparrow hopping on the ground. World Sparrow Day is celebrated every year on March 20.
tombjorklundart.bsky.social
I noticed that the dear girl is out in the public again, and this time in association with a news story about a study on the skin colour changes of prehistoric Europeans over time. So here she is, Lola, the Danish birch pitch chewing gum girl.
A blue eyed, brown skinned Stone Age girl sitting by the water surrounded by fishing equipment, mallard ducks and hazelnuts, in what is now Denmark. She is holding a piece of birch pitch gum in her hand. From the ancient gum researchers were able to find DNA from the person who had chewed it, and even from the food she had probably eaten shortly before.
Reposted by Tom Björklund
villesinkkonen.bsky.social
Money is tight now thanks to some unexpected expenses
So here’s me bumping my gumroad. -.-

I have some 3d models and my procreate fur brushes available on my gumroad at

villes.gumroad.com

Thank you for your support!
tombjorklundart.bsky.social
Hunting extinct giant pika in Sardinia. From the book "La preistoria in Sardegna".
A Mesolithic hunter capturing Sardinian pikas with a net. On the ground a large Charonia shell, which was used as an instrument.
tombjorklundart.bsky.social
Very entertaining. And interesting observation.
tombjorklundart.bsky.social
Illustration based on the Mesolithic burial at Gøngehusvej 7 in Vedbæk, Denmark.
A Stone Age woman dressed in leather and fur clothing is standing sideways. Her headwear is decorated with the bill and feathers of a great crested grebe. She also wears a necklace made of teeth of several animal species. A pair of deer hooves is hanging below the necklace.
tombjorklundart.bsky.social
Heavens, Rafael! But thank you so much. I'll try to remember your kind words next time I struggle, stumble and fail. Which will probably be tomorrow.
tombjorklundart.bsky.social
The flintknapper – Neo-Eneolithic of Sardinia

A toolmaker is sitting on the ground knapping flint outside his house, leaning against the wattle and daub wall. In the doorway a woman dressed in black is looking at the viewer, beside her a young girl holds a toddler in her arms. In the foreground on the left side of the image a customer is inspecting the flint blades. On the right side a small dog is sleeping amidst baskets, animal hides, wooden bowls and a simple stone grinder. At the bottom center of the picture is a peculiar three legged ceramic vessel.
tombjorklundart.bsky.social
Playing pretending
Essay by April Nowell on childhood during the Ice Age:
aeon.co/essays/what-...
Four children of various ages playing pretending. Perhaps imitating a religious ritual. One of them is wearing a wooden mask and an old bearskin cloak. Behind them there are woolly mammoth skull parts and tusks on the ground.
tombjorklundart.bsky.social
Please share your blue art! 💙🖼

Peopling of the Caribbean:
www.shh.mpg.de/1716874/peop...
The image symbolises the early peopling of the Caribbean. A canoe is heading towards small islands. The viewer sits in the canoe and a young boy is sitting on the bow looking at the viewer. Behind the boy there is a pet Cuban macaw. A now extinct species.
tombjorklundart.bsky.social
Sometimes I make dinosaur art.
tombjorklundart.bsky.social
A work in progress image of a depiction of Aurignacian mammoth ivory jewellery I made for the Urgeschichtliches Museum Blaubeuren in Germany.
tombjorklundart.bsky.social
In 2020 I was asked to create illustrations for an upcoming viking exhibition but unexpectedly the project was put on hold. The Russian Ministry of Culture had suddenly denied permission for loans from Russian museums to leave the country. We now know the grim reason behind that action.
tombjorklundart.bsky.social
My cover image for The Oxford Handbook of Mesolithic Europe (available for pre-ordering – the book, not the image, as it still isn't possible to get any prints of my pics...)
tombjorklundart.bsky.social
A very old one! I mean I do understand the need of classification but as an illustrator I'm not comfortable with it. So it's just a random individual from an ancient population of hominins. Thanks!