All AP Art History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #351 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
Which famous, early-twentieth-century painter is commonly referred to as the father of Cubism?
Eugène Delacroix
Pablo Picasso
Frank Weston Benson
J. M. W. Turner
Winslow Homer
Pablo Picasso
Winslow Homer, J.M.W. Turner, and Eugène Delacroix are known as impressionist painters. Frank Weston Benson is known for realistic paintings, American impressionism, watercolors and etchings. Someone familiar with the works of Pablo Picasso and the specific style that Cubism entails should be able to deduce that Pablo Picasso, of the choices given, is known as the father of Cubism.
Example Question #352 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
Which twentieth-century Spanish artist was known for his dream-like paintings?
Pablo Picasso
Francisco de Goya
André Breton
Salvador Dali
Giorgio de Chirico
Salvador Dali
Dali is the only Spanish Surrealist artist in this list. Though Goya created many dream-like paintings in his Black Period, it does not fit the century specified, and Giorgio de Chirico is of Italian decent.
Example Question #353 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
Based on style, the work shown here was painted by _________________.
Pablo Picasso
Georges Braque
Henri Matisse
Ernest Ludwig Kirchner
Ernest Ludwig Kirchner
This work, Self-Portrait as a Soldier, features vivid colors, slightly abstract forms, and a generally dark tone, all hallmarks of the German Expressionism that flourished in 1920s Weimar Germany. Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, the painter of this work, was one of the leading figures of the movement, helping shape the group known as "Die Brücke," or The Bridge, which was a significant part of Expressionism.
Image is in the public domain, accessed through Wikipedia Media Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Kirchner_-_Selbstbildnis_als_Soldat.jpg
Example Question #354 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
Based on style and composition, the work shown here was created by _________________.
Georges Braque
Henri Matisse
Claude Monet
Paul Cezanne
Henri Matisse
Henri Matisse was one of the revolutionary artists of the early twentieth century, reshaping and influencing the course of painting. Matisse was heavily influenced by Impressionism and early Abstract art, but often used abstract shapes and forms to enhance somewhat realistic depictions. In Goldfish, Matisse quite clearly presents fish in a bowl, but uses abstract shapes around it to create an unnatural and alluring perspective.
Example Question #355 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
The work shown here most closely aligns with the artistic style of ___________________.
Impressionism
Fauvism
Cubism
Surrealism
Fauvism
Henri Matisse was one of the leaders of Fauvism, an abstract art movement that had its fullest flowering in the first decade of the twentieth century. As compared to other abstract movements, Fauvism utilized largely representational forms, but exaggerated and heightened use of color brought more abstraction to their works. The Goldfish, shown here, shows many of the signature elements of Fauvism.
Example Question #356 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
The Goldfish, by Henri Matisse, is most similar to the work of the artist _________________.
Pablo Picasso
Piet Mondrian
Claude Monet
Gustave Courbet
Pablo Picasso
Both Henri Matisse and Pablo Picasso were heavily influenced by Post-Impressionists such as Paul Cezanne and Paul Gauguin, pushing art more towards true abstraction in the early twentieth century. Although they had distinct styles, both artists used non-representational forms, vivid colors, and inspiration from non-European art. Matisse and Picasso greatly revolutionized the very form and trajectory of painting in the twentieth century.
Example Question #357 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
Andy Warhol's Marilyn Diptych is representative of which twentieth century art movement?
Abstract expressionism
Surrealism
Cubism
Pop art
Pop art
Pop Art emerged in the 1950s from schools of fine art and graphic design schools, when trained artists turned their interest to working with images from popular culture. Celebrities, comic books, consumer items, film stills, and patriotic images were all copied, adapted, and repurposed as high art, which also challenged the very notion of high and low art. Andy Warhol's Marilyn Diptych is representative as it takes one image of the actress Marilyn Monroe and copies it multiple times in bright colors.
Example Question #358 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
Joseph Lawrence's The Migration of the Negro was most influenced by which of the following artistic movements?
Impressionism
Neo-realism
Cubism
Abstract expressionism
Cubism
Joseph Lawrence's The Migration of the Negro is a sixty panel work, with each panel captioned, telling the story of the mass migration of African-Americans from the rural south to northern urban centers in the first part of the twentieth century. Lawrence stood apart for the way his work adapted more from cubism than expressionism or surrealism. Lawrence often commented that he was more influenced by his surroundings in Harlem, but that everywhere he looked in his community he saw elements of cubism.
Example Question #359 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
Fauvism in the early 1900's was a movement that _________________.
concentrated on a renewed use of realistic colors
was so named because its artists frequently chose wild animals as their subjects
was so named because the artists were condemned as "wild beasts"
followed as a natural outgrowth stylistically of Impressionism
was so named because the artists were condemned as "wild beasts"
"Fauvism" is so named because the term "fauve," or "wild beast," was attributed to certain artists exhibiting at the 1905 Salon d'Automne. Their lack of realism, especially in the use of nonrepresentational colors, led to severe criticism of their work. Their movement was named after this insulting nickname.
Example Question #360 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
Based on the use of color in his paintings, choose the person who would have said that color was not given to us so that we should imitate nature, but so that we would express our emotions.
Jan Vermeer
Jean-Francois Millet
Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres
Henri Matisse
Henri Matisse
Matisse wanted color to reflect feelings, and so used "nonrepresentational colors." He and the Fauves freed color from realistic representation of the subject. All the others are more traditional and realistic in their use of color.
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