ART HISTORY 115

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Gauguin left Paris in 1882 to live among the peasants in ______.

Pont Aven, Britanny

The Rococo was a style of painting as well as interior decoration.

TRUE

A Netherlandish painter interested in folk customs and the daily life of humble people and peasants was ______.

BRUEGEL

During the Rococo period, Louis XV successfully curtailed the power and freedom of the French aristocracy.

FALSE

Even before Poussin and Claude, landscape had been considered among the most noble subjects in art.

FALSE

Genre scenes are first painted during the Baroque period.

FALSE

Il Gesu's ceiling was left plain and unadorned because of Jesuit proscriptions against ostentation.

FALSE

Michelangelo was a brilliant painter, sculptor, and architect, but saw himself primarily as a painter.

FALSE

Pieter Bruegel the Elder never traveled outside the Netherlands.

FALSE

Pollock's gestures are recorded on his paintings' surfaces, but the surfaces of David Smith's sculptures are perfectly smooth

FALSE

Rembrandt spent several years in Rome absorbing the lessons of the Italian Renaissance and Mannerism.

FALSE

Rococo painting in France represents the triumph of Poussinistes over Rubenistes.

FALSE

The first art academy ( the Accedemia del Disegno) was established in Florence in 1563.

TRUE

Whistler's primary concern in Symphony in White (fig. 25.27) is ______.

"art for art's sake" beauty

The Machine Age refers to the period ______.

BETWEEN WORLD WAR I AND WORLD WAR II

Picasso employed a monochromatic palette for his paintings of society"s outcasts during the ______.

BLUE PERIOD

The Medusa painted by Gericault was ______.

A FRENCH GOVERNMENT SHIP

The Louvre was built as ______.

A PALACE

A unicorn could only be captured by ______.

A VIRGIN

Picasso, in tandem with ______, developed Analytic Cubism around 1910.

BRAQUE

Vanishing Point is-The point at which the orthogonals meet and disappear in a composition done with scientific perspective.

TRUE

After 1882 Cezanne lived most of his life in isolation near his hometown of _______.

AI-EN-PROVENCE

Julia Margaret Cameron, Sister Spirits (fig. 25.36)

ALBMEN PRINT

An American Place gallery was opened in 1928 by ______.

ALFRED STIEGLITZ

Turner's The Slave Ship

ALL ANSWERS ARE CORRECT a. relates to an actual event b. poses questions of interpretation c. uses color as a vehicle to evoke emotions

In Degas' The Orchestra of the Paris Opera (fig. 25.12), the influence of Japanese prints is apparent in the ______.

ALL ANSWERS ARE CORRECT a. sharp contours and flat forms b. skewed viewpoint and compressed space c. arbitrarily cropped figures

Intense beams of light are used by Caravaggio to ______.

ALL ANSWERS ARE CORRECT a. suggest a divine presence {yes, and... b. model figures, to make them solid and corporeal c. heighten drama and theatricality

For the design of St. Charles Borromaeus (fig. 22.16), Johann Fischer von Erlach "uses aspects of major works of the canon of Western architecture," including ______.

ALL ANSWERS ARE CORRECT a. the façade of Borromini's Sant'Agnese b. the Pantheon's portico c. the Column of Trajan

Raphael's School of Athens borrows ______.

ALL ANSWERS ARE CORRECT a. from Michelangelo figures of expressive energy and physical power b. from Bramante, lofty and imposing architecture inspired by Imperial Rome c. from Leonardo individual figures fused into small groups that are then combined into a large group

Smithson, Spiral Jetty (fig. 29.27)

ALTERED LAKE

Gersaint, for whom Watteau painted Gersaint's Signboard (fig. 22.4), was ______.

AN ART DEALER

______ is a Romantic sculptor famous for depicting savage struggles between animals.

ANTONIE-LOUIS BARYE

When Monet painted a series (thirty haystacks, for instance), he claimed (despite Gustave Geffroy and others) that while composition changed very little, the changing ______ made every picture different.

ATMOSPHERIC AND LIGHT CONDITIONS

Boccioni, Unique Forms (fig. 27.23)

BRONZE

The process that Michelangelo used for his sculptures can best be seen in the __________.

Awakening Prisoner

The Kaisersaal in the Residenz in Wurzburg (fig. 22-22) was designed in part by _________.

BALTHASAR NEUMANN

The architect who designed the colonnade and piazza in front of St. Peter's was ______.

BERNINI

Juan Sanchez Cotan's Quince, Cabbage, Melon, and Cucumber (fig. 19.33) is a haunting Spanish example of ______.

Both still life and bodegone

Jacob Lawrence, In the North (fig. 28.54)

CASEIN TEMPERA ON HARDBOARD

Pietro da Cortona, Allegory of Divine Providence (fig. 19.11)

CEILING FRESCO

The Great Fire of London of 1666 proved a boon to the career of ______.

CHRISTOPHER WREN

Architecture by Palladio displays the quality referred to as __________ .

CLASSICISTIC

Hamilton, Just What is it that Makes Today's Homes So Different, So Appealing? (fig. 29.19)

COLLAGE

Picasso, Guitar, Sheet Music, and Wine Glass (fig. 27.7)

COLLAGE

______ connects Fauvism to the tradition of Van Gogh, Gauguin, Monet, Delacroix, and Titian

COLOR

Inspired by Duchamp's ready-mades, Rauschenberg fashioned ______ like Odalisk (fig. 29.10), innovative works that merged painting, sculpture, collage and found objects.

COMBINES

A combination of graphite and clay used by Seurat for his drawings

CONTE CRAYON

The Self-Portrait by Parmigianino is unusual because it records his image from a __________.

CONVEX MIRROR

Judd. Untitled (fig. 29.23)

COPPER

Watteau sets a famous fete galante on ______, an island associated with love and the birth of Venus.

CYTHERA

The precedent for the radical distortions of space in Les Demoiselles d'Avignon (fig. 27.5) may have been supplied by ______

Cezanne

The Bavarian pilgrimage church called Die Wies (fig. 22-19) was designed by _______.

Domenikus Zimmermann

In his design for the Laurentian Library vestibule , Michelangelo succeeded in using a classical architectural vocabulary in a way that architects of antiquity would have used it.

FALSE

The Style of Louis XIV is a good example of ______.

Classicism

The "Isenheim Altarpiece" includes an enormous graphic account of the __________.

Crucifixion

Augustus Washington, John Brown (fig. 25.31)

DAGUERREOTYPE

An invisible complement is implied in Bernini's work depicting __________.

DAVID

In a characteristically witty challenge to assumptions of and about art, ______ invented the "assisted Readymade".

DUCHAMP

Kandinsky's Sketch for "Composition II" is entirely abstract and nonrepresentational.

FALSE

Le Corbusier's Ronchamp (fig.s 29.41 and 29.42) demonstrates his continuing attachment to the "machine aesthetic."

FALSE

Luther stressed the importance of indulgences, and the intervention of clerics and saints.

FALSE

Mannerist architecture is known for its logic and structure.

FALSE

The artist who was immersed in controversy at the Pennsylvania Academy for advocating study of the live nude model was _____.

EAKINS

The Symbolist poets and painters reacted against the Naturalism found in the novels of ________.

EMILE ZOLA

Johns, Three Flags (fig. 29.11).

ENCAUSTIC ON CANVAS

Hendrick Goltzius, Farnese Hercules (fig. 20.14)

ENGRAVING

Hogarth, He Revels (The Orgy) (fig. 22.13)

ENGRAVING

The painter Parmigianino was also very interested in the technique of __________

ETCHING

Rembrandt, Hundred Guilder Print (fig. 20.24)

ETCHNG AND DRYPOINT

"The Last Supper" by Leonardo DaVinci was a technical success.

FALSE

All Realists painted en plein air.

FALSE

Analytic Cubism adopted the vibrant colors of Fauvism.

FALSE

Arp arranged the papers of his collages according to numerical ratios he found in Vitruvius.

FALSE

Because of his unconventional subject matter and style, Courbet was never allowed to exhibit at the Salon.

FALSE

Bramante completed the construction of St. Peter"s in Rome.

FALSE

Donatello's relief scultpture of "St. George Slaying the Dragon" exemplifies "schiacciato" which means flattened out relief.

FALSE

One of the most debated works of the Renaissance, Donatello's bronze David, once stood on a high pedestal in the courtyard of the Medici palace. The David may be the first free standing, life-size nude statue made since antiquity.

TRUE

Smithson's Spiral Jetty (fig. 29.27) can be considered Minimalism because of its pared-down geometric form, and because Smithson assiduously avoids references to environmental, ontological and political issues.

FALSE

The New Deal, Franklin Delano Roosevelt's program for economic recovery and domestic reform, provided NO support for artists.

FALSE

The architecture of Michelangelo, Della Porta and others shows a trend toward flatter, more static facades

FALSE

The goal of Harlem Renaissance artists was to make art that was indistinguishable in form and theme from the best European and American Modernism.

FALSE

The painter Titian worked primarily in tempera.

FALSE

The palace and gardens of Versailles are located in downtown Paris.

FALSE

Though popular in France, Rococo never spreads to other parts of Europe.

FALSE

~Romanticism opposed nationalism.

FALSE

Jan de Heem painted still->life paintings that are designated as pronk, or notable for______.

FLAMBOYANCE AND LAVISH DISPLAY

Rachel Ruysch is best known for her paintings of ______.

FLOWERS

Flavin, the nominal three (fig. 29.24)

FLUORESCENT TUBES

Insisting that his paintings alluded to nothing and were "of" no more than the physical thing that met the eye, ______ said, "What you see is what you see."

FRANK STELLA

Goya's The Third of May depicts ______

FRENCH TROOPS IN SPAIN

Michelangelo, The Creation of Adam

FRESCO

In works like Hare, fig. 18.13, Durer's precise rendering of nature's details of appearance and texture recalls the style of the ______.

Flemish masters

Meret Oppenheim, Object (fig. 28.22)

GAZELLE FUR-COVERED TEACUP, SAUCER, AND SPOON

The Brooklyn Bridge, a stupendous engineering feat, features arches drawn from ______.

GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE

London's Houses of Parliament (fig. 24.29) is an example of ______.

GOTHIC REVIVAL

Varvara Fedorvna Stepanova, Design for Sportswear (fig. 28.30)

GOUACHE AND INK ON PAPER

The principles of Morris & Co. (shaped by Ruskin and then later adopted by the Arts and Crafts movement) included all of the following EXCEPT ______.

Greco-Roman motifs

Architects who can be described as "rational, geometric, and functional" include both ______.

Gropius and Behrens

Dada, a word chosen randomly from a dictionary, translates to ______.

HOBBYHORSE

The dome of the Parma cathedral by Correggio is painted in a technique called __________ .

ILLUSIONISTIC PERSPECTIVE

Eiffel Tower (fig. 25.42)

IRON

In Friedrich's Abbey in an Oak Forest (fig. 24.8), a monk _____

IS BURIED

Abstract Expressionism developed out of Surrealism, but unlike its predecessor, Abstract Expressionism ______.

IS GENERALLY NONREPRESENTATIONAL

Our vantage point in Degas' The Orchestra of the Paris Opera (fig. 25.12) is not a traditional one in western art, but approximates the view of a theatergoer in the pit.

TRUE

Pictures by Velazquez and Murillo are often painterly, with free and loose brushwork.

TRUE

Which of the following pairs (artist—avant-garde movement) are mismatched? ______.

JOHNS-SPIRAL

The photographer ______ is remembered as a Pictorialist with an aesthetic vision shaped by the Aesthetic Movement.

JULIA MARGARET CAMERON

Tiepolo worked on The Marriage of Frederick Barbarossa in the _______.

Kaisersaal, Wurzburg

The interior of Il Gesu uses __________ for emotional and expressive purposes.

LIGHT

Daumier, It's Safe to Release This One (fig. 25.4)

LITHOGRAPH

The medium used to reproduce Toulouse−Lautrec"s posters

LITHOGRAPHY

A covered gallery space that has at least one open side is called a __________ .

LOGGIA

______ use of sharp contrasts of light and dark, and his detailed naturalism, ultimately derive from Caravaggio.

La Tour's

Tatlin's Constructivist Productivism called for an aesthetic revolution that would redesign everything to be more ______.

MACHINELIKE

The French sculptor who produced three- dimensional works inspired by ancient Greek sculpture was ______.

MAILLOL

Beginning in the 1520s, the artificial style known as __________ began to seen in Florence.

MANIERA

Brancusi, Newborn (fig. 27.35)

MARBLE

Michelangelo, Awakening Prisoner

MARBLE

Alessandro Algardi, The Meeting of Pope Leo I and Attila (fig. 19.32)

MARBLE RELIEF SCULPTURE

______ is an Impressionist famous for sanctifying images of mothers and children.

MARY CASSATT

Less is ______" was the motto of Mies van der Rohe, a High Modernist.

MORE

Technique used to create photomontage

MULTIPLE-NEGATIVE PHOTOGRAPHY

Diego Rivera, Man, Controller of the Universe (fig. 28.55)

MURAL (FRESCO)

The photographer who used multiple cameras to study animal and human locomotion was _____.

MUYBRIDGE

Pope Sixtus IV della Rovere sponsored several important projects in the last quarter of the century. One of these was the building at the Vatican of a new chapel for the Pope, called the Sistine Chapel after Sixtus IV.

TRUE

~Delacroix's Death of Sardanapalus (fig. 24.20), a story of sex and violence, is set in the ancient Near East, and based on a Romantic poem.

TRUE

In Homer's Snap the Whip, the children's game can be seen as symbolic of ______.

NATIONAL UNION AFTER CIVIL WAR

Artemisia Gentileschi, Self-Portrait (fig. 19.6)

OIL ON CANVAS

Giorgione, The Tempest

OIL ON CANVAS

Hyacinthe Rigaud, Louis XIV (fig. 21.10)

OIL ON CANVAS

Rembrandt, Return of the Prodigal Son (fig. 20.26)

OIL ON CANVAS

Claude Lorrain, Pastoral Landscape (fig. 21.8)

OIL ON COPPER

Leonardo, Mona Lisa

OIL ON PANEL

Man Ray, The Gift (fig. 28.21)

PAINTED FLATIRON AND TACKS

Artemisia Gentileschi's father was a ______.

PAINTER

The Bibliotheque Ste. Genevieve is located in _______.

PARIS

Rosalba Carriera, Charles Sackville(p. 769)

PASTEL ON PAPER

PIERRE

PAUL PUDGET, MILO OF CROTONA (FIG. 21.20) ->MARBLE

Leonardo, Embryo in the Womb

PEN DRAWING

Raoul Hausmann, ABCD (fig. 28.4)

PHOTOMONTAGE

The art movement that imitated mass media and commercial imagery was ______.

POP ART

Until the second quarter of the nineteenth century, nearly all American paintings were ______.

PORTRAITS

The nude woman in Manet's Luncheon (like Olympia) was assumed to be a ______.

PROSTITUE

Pietro da Cortona's stunningly illusionistic ceiling, Allegory of Divine Providence (fig. 19.11), pays tribute to ______.

Pope Urban VIII

Realism arose simultaneously with the______.

REVOLUTION OF 1848

The painter who authored "The Discourses" and gave regular lectures on art theory at the British Royal Academy was _____.

REYNOLDS

______ was a painter in the color-field school of Abstract Expressionism.

ROTHKO

Millet's The Sower (fig. 25.3) is ______.

Realist in its subject matter and Romantic in its sensibility

Which of the following pairs (artist—avant-garde movement) is mismatched? ______

Richard Serra—Pop Art

Warhol, Campbell's Soup Cans (seen in fig. 29.16)

SILKSCREENS

Rembrandt, Portrait of Saskia (fig. 20.21)

SILVERPOINT ON PARCHMENT

Which of the following is NOT prized by Romanticism? ______.

STANDARS AND LOGIC

The materials used for the Schlesinger Meyer Building

STEEL FRAME FACED WITH TERRA COTTA

Inspired by Piranesi, Sir John Soane's Consols Office (fig. 24.30) was Neoclassical and ______.

SUBLIME

Romare Bearden's collage The Prevalence of Ritual: Baptism combines a fractured Cubist composition with a concern for issues of African-American identity.

TRUE

Sir Christopher Wren showed very little interest in architecture until he was about 30 years old.

TRUE

A painting by Poussin (fig. 21.7) shows ______ on the island of Patmos.

St. John

Fluxus artist Nam June Paik constructed Electronic Superhighway: Continental U.S. (fig. 29.31) out of neon, steel and ______.

TELEVISION MONITORS

Media used by Munch for The Scream

TEMPERA AND CASEIN

Antoine Coysevox, Charles Le Brun (fig. 21.19)

TERRA COTTA

Clodion, Nymph and Satyr Carousing (fig. 22.12)

TERRA COTTA

Bernini, Head of St. Jerome (p. 687)

TERRA COTTA BOZETTO

Rembrandt's Hundred Guilder Print (fig. 20.24) draws its subject matter from ______.

THE GOSPEL OF ST. MATTHEW

The "picture-within-the-picture" in Vermeer's Woman Holding a Balance depicts ______

THELAST JUDGMENT

The great eighteenth century master of Italian illusionistic ceiling decorations was _______.

TIEPOLO

The format for most northern altarpieces was the __________ arrangement.

TRIPTYCH

Watteau, Seated Young Woman (fig. 22.3)

TROIS CRAYON DRAWING

British Realism (e.g., the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood) can be seen as a reaction against industrialization, materialism and the complexity of modern life.

TRUE

Donatello's innovations in Florence soon became known elsewhere in Italy, leading to commissions in other cities, such as Siena and Padua. His career was long and productive making him the most influential sculptor of fifteenth century Italy.

TRUE

Figures in Leonardo's Adoration of the Magi are united by gesture, gaze, chiaroscuro, and their pyramidal arrangement.

TRUE

Hals' Banquet of the Officers of the St. George Civic Guard (fig. 20.16) is an especially lively group portrait made up of twelve "speaking likenesses."

TRUE

Hartley's Portrait of a German Officer (fig. 27.39) is an unconventional portrait inasmuch as the sitter is absent.

TRUE

Hector Guimard designed entrances to the Paris Metro stations for the Paris Exposition of 1900.

TRUE

Iconology considers meaning (iconography) in a specific historical context.

TRUE

In the Rococo era, the status of interior design and decorative arts approached that of Fine Art.

TRUE

The Mona Lisa's sitter is represented at half-length and in a three-quarters pose.

TRUE

Picasso, Violin (fig. 27.8)

construction

Henri Cartier-Bresson's photographs (like fig. 28.20) are considered Surrealist because they ______.

contain the strange and unexpected

Italian word for "set against." a Composition developed by Greeks to represent movement in a figure. the parts of the body are placed asymmetrically in opposition to each other around a central axis, and careful attention is pains to the distribution of weight.

contrapposto

In Venice, Canaletto specialized in ______, views of city landscapes, which were often purchased by young Englishmen as souvenirs of the Grand Tour.

VEDUTE

The Villa Rotonda by Palladio is located in the city of

VICENZA TOLEDO ROME

The painter who employed colors based on a personal system of symbolism was ______.

Van Gogh

Julio Gonzalez, Head (fig. 28.13)

WELDED IRON

Smith, Cubi (fig. 29.6)

WELDING AND BURNISHED STAINLESS STEEL

______ was a visionary British artist and poet who resisted the stultifying effects of civilization and its institutions.

WILLIAM BLAKE

______ applies the Neoclassical vocabulary of history painting to genre paintings of American subjects.

WILLIAM SIDNEY MOUNT

Ando Hiroshige, Plum Estate (fig. 25.13)

WOODBLOCK PRINT

The primary goal of Art Nouveau was to _______.

raise the crafts to the level of fine art

In his Last Supper (fig. 15.29.), Castagno focused attention on the three key characters by______.

accentuating the marble panel behind them

Duchamp, Bicycle Wheel (fig. 27.32)

assemblage

Die Brucke artists adopted the medium of woodcut (e.g., fig. 27.13) because ______.

both it lent itself to curvilinear grace and elegance and of its expressively raw and organic qualities are correct.

Vermeer may have employed a ______, a drawing device that transferred an external scene to the inside of a light->proof box.

camera obscura

According to legend, some of the subjects of Rembrandt's Night Watch (fig. 20.23) were dissatisfied with the group portrait because they felt it______.

featured some company members, and obscured others

To Poussin, an "ideal" landscape (such as fig. 21.7) would be ______.

heroic, serene and classically balanced

Durer's Self-Portrait (fig. 18.16) is patterned after ______.

images of Christ

A plein-air painting ______.

is executed outdoors, on-the-spot

The spatial composition of the Last Supper by Tintoretto was affected by __________.

its placement on the wall to the right of the altar

Leonardo unsuccessfully used __________ for the painting of the Last Supper.

oil-tempera combination Correct

The point of view in Aldorfer's Battle of Issus (fig. 18.21) is ______.

omniscient, from high above

The pose and proportions of the lovelorn man in A Young Man Among the Roses (fig. 18.25) are derived from ______.

the Mannerists of the School of Fontainebleau

Rosa Bonheur's Plowing in the Nivernais (fig. 25.6) is Realist (in the Courbet sense of the term) except for ______.

the careful, deliberate composition, and the avoidance of the unseemly

A lute, seen in fig. 20.15 and 20.35, traditionally signifies ______

the harmony between lovers

An important theme in Warhol's art is ______.

the impact, ubiquity and repetitive sameness of advertising and consumer culture

In his Women Series, de Kooning "did the unthinkable" in that ______.

the paintings were representational

By the late 1960's, the Post-Minimal aesthetic operated on an enormous scale, not only far beyond the confines of the gallery but far away from the art world, and in many instances in uninhabited remote areas. Several artist began sculpting with earth, snow, volcanoes, lightning, and deep-sea sites, their work often temporary and existing today only in photographs and drawings.

true

Formalist painting emerged in the heyday of Abstract Expressionism, the early 1950's and enlarge part as a reaction to it.

true

Pop Art is a style of art that emerged in New York in the 1960's - The style got its name because it derives it imagery from popular or vernacular culture

true

The most famous art critic in the United States was in the 1940'sand well into the 1960's was Clement Greenberg, who wrote art reviews for The Nation and The Partisan Review.

true

While Pop Art emerged in America in the early 1960's it had already appeared in London in the mid 1950's.

true

In William Holman Hunt's The Awakening Conscience (fig. 25.23), the room is full of ______

vulgar products of crass consumerism

Schiele, Self-Portrait with Twisted Arm (fig. 27.19)

watercolor and charcoal

Hammons, Higher Goals (fig. 29.35)

wood poles, basketball hoops, bottle caps, and other objects


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