All AP Art History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #221 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
Both artists break from the impressionists, technically speaking, in what way?
Treatment of paint
Mystical elements
Time spent on painting
Subject matter
Colors
Treatment of paint
While subject matter and mystical elements apply to the bottom painting, they do not apply to the top painting. In addition, there is no way to know if the time spent on the paintings differs from those of the impressionists. Moreover, color is not necessarily a good indicator (particularly for the top painting). The best answer is the treatment of paint. Both van Gogh and Gauguin used paint far more aggressively than their impressionist counterparts.
Example Question #222 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
In what time period were these two paintings finished?
1875 - 1890
1890 - 1910
1885 - 1900
1880 - 1895
1890 - 1905
1885 - 1900
Van Gogh's Cypresses was painted in 1889 and Gauguin's Where Do We Come From? What Are We? Where Are We Going? was painted in 1897.
Example Question #223 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
The artist of this work is ______________.
Edouard Manet
Egon Schiele
Claude Monet
Paul Gauguin
Vincent van Gogh
Vincent van Gogh
Given the intense brush style and treatment of landscape and subject, this piece is a van Gogh. Manet and Monet were impressionists, and this work is post-impressionist. Schiele does not fit the time period or the style.
Example Question #224 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
The artist of this work often likened the cypress trees to what?
Dark flames
Large paint brushes
Egyptian obelisks
Radio towers
Lampposts
Egyptian obelisks
van Gogh often referred to cypress trees as Egyptian obelisks, drawing connections to ancient history in his work. In his cypress tree paintings, he was fascinated by the dark, vertical nature of these trees in bright surroundings.
Example Question #225 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
__________ was a literary and artistic movement originating in Europe that came to be during the late eighteenth century. Its main concentration was on emotion and the individual, and the celebration of nature and times past. This movement had a large impact not only on popular art and literature, but also on day-to-day life for those living during its peak, as it affected education and science as well.
Mannerism
Liberalism
Romanticism
Art Nouveau
The Renaissance
Romanticism
The answer is Romanticism. Romanticism was in many ways a reaction to the Industrial Revolution and the Age of Enlightenment, as many artists during that time felt as though society had become too rational, exact and scientific. Romanticism praised and sought to express deep emotion—even negative emotions like fear and apprehension—and the concept of nature and the natural world. Romanticism also celebrated heroic or daring individuals, as they were seen as superior members of society. The art, literature, and music of this time period reflects these sentiments.
Example Question #226 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
On the basis of style, the work shown can be attributed to ____________________.
Gustave Courbet
Claude Monet
Eugene Delacroix
Henri Matisse
Claude Monet
Many elements of this 1877 painting, The Saint Lazare Station, bear the hallmarks of the school of art known as Impressionism. The visible brushstrokes, soft colors in order to mimic natural light and the relatively mundane setting of a train station are all signature elements of Impressionism. The only answer choice who was a key member of the Impressionist movement is Claude Monet.
Image is in the public domain, accessed through Wikipedia Media Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Claude_Monet_004.jpg
Example Question #227 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
This work in particular and JMW Turner's style in general were precursors to which later, significant artistic movement?
Cubism
Neo-Classicalism
Realism
Impressionism
Impressionism
JMW Turner often used quick brushstrokes, lighter colors, and a loose representation of objects in order to convey natural elements, especially movement and light. These techniques and their ability to shape outdoor scenes were hugely influential on the French Impressionists of the later nineteenth century.
Image is in the public domain, accessed through Wikipedia Media Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Slave-ship.jpg
Example Question #228 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
An American Impressionist known for her paintings of mothers with their children is _________________.
Mary Cassatt
Berthe Morisot
Dorothea Lange
Georgia O'Keefe
Mary Cassatt
Dorothea Lange was a 20th century photographer. Georgia O'Keefe was a Precisionist known for her paintings of flowers and bones. Berthe Morisot is a French Impressionist. Mary Cassatt was born in Pennsylvania and moved to Europe to study art, where she met Degas and other Impressionists.
Example Question #229 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
The Coiffure, by Mary Cassatt, is related to the artistic movement _____________________.
Impressionism
Fauvism
Surrealism
Neo-Classicalism
Impressionism
Mary Cassatt was the only American woman to be actively involved as an artist in the late nineteenth century French avant-garde art movements. While this work is not traditionally impressionistic, especially as it is a drypoint print rather than a painting, it shares many similarities in tone and style to the works of the Impressionists Cassatt worked so closely with in France. Most notably, the influence of Japanese art, the everyday subject, and the free lines are hallmarks of Impressionism as an artistic movement.
Image is in the public domain, accessed through Wikipedia Media Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Mary_Cassatt_-_The_Coiffure_-_NGC_29882.jpg
Example Question #230 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
This work is by which British painter?
J.M.W. Turner
John Constable
Joshua Reynolds
George Romney
Thomas Gainsborough
J.M.W. Turner
All are famous British painters of the 18th and 19th centuries, however the distinctive use of light, the focus on sea and sky, and the fact of its distinct popularity mean this must be the work of J.M.W. Turner.
Image is in the public domain, accessed through WikiArt: http://www.wikiart.org/en/william-turner/the-fighting-temeraire-tugged-to-her-last-berth-to-be-broken-up-1839