All AP Art History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1 : Understanding Terminology That Describes Twentieth And Twenty First Century Architecture
Beaux-Arts Architecture typically features all of the following EXCEPT __________.
Classical detailing
utilitarian design
arched windows
flat roofs
utilitarian design
"Beaux-Arts Architecture" refers to the style promoted by the École de Beaux-Arts in Paris, but especially as promulgated by Americans who had studied there and produced work in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The style was a mix of neoclassicism and rococo elements, with the unifying themes being grand spaces, small classical flourishes, flat roofs, arched windows, and fancy embellishments around doors and windows. Any utilitarian spaces were hidden from any obvious views in favor of grand entrances and sweeping hallways.
Example Question #151 : Architecture
The concept of "deconstructivist" architecture is most closely identified with which of the following individuals?
Frank Gehry
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe
Philip Johnson
Frank Lloyd Wright
Frank Gehry
"Deconstructivism" refers to a style of architecture that seems to break down typical architectural conventions, often by using forms and shapes that curve and bend. Frank Gehry has worked in such a style most of his career, with his work on the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao and the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles being notable examples of his approach. These buildings feature curving lines and non-rectilineal shapes, hallmarks of the deconstructivist approach.
Example Question #4 : Twentieth And Twenty First Century Architecture
All of the following are hallmarks of the International style of architecture EXCEPT for __________.
clean lines
concern with functionality
extensive use of ornamentation
wide use of glass
extensive use of ornamentation
The "International Style" is a term that derives from a 1932 book of that name by Henry-Russell Hitchcock and Philip Johnson. The two men used the term to described the then-contemporary aesthetic that had grown to dominate architecture since 1900. Uniting Bauhaus, Functionalism, and L'Esprit Nouveau styles, Hitchcock and Johnson promoted architecture that valued functionality, clean lines, and use of modern materials such as plate glass and steel.
Example Question #943 : Ap Art History
What design and architecture style is defined by a mix of traditional craft motifs with industrial processes?
Neoclassicist
Beaux-Arts
Modernist
Art Nouveau
Art Deco
Art Deco
Art Deco was a thoroughly early-twentieth-century phenomenon in arts and architecture, as it blended machine-age construction with traditional craftwork aesthetics. The designs featured a great deal of metal with rich colors, bold geometric shapes, and distinct ornamentation. One of the most famous Art Deco buildings is the Chrysler Building in New York.
Example Question #3 : Twentieth And Twenty First Century Architecture
Frank Lloyd Wright is an American architect known for creating homes and buildings in an organic style, with overhanging eaves and hipped roofs. With what school of architecture is he most associated?
Functionalism
Art Deco
Art Nouveau
Prairie
Brutalism
Prairie
Wright is best associated with the Prairie school. The hint in the question was the eaves and the roofs, as those provide that context.
The answer cannot be brutalism or functionalism as the homes and buildings created by Wright did not follow the simplistic styles of those schools: those schools would have obelisk-like buildings that lacked much detail.
Art Nouveau was a bit too early of a period for Wright to be associated with. Art Deco, though in the same period as Wright, differentiated by its ornate designs, in contradistinction with Wright's minimalist, natural designs.
Example Question #6 : Twentieth And Twenty First Century Architecture
_____________ is used to determine an artwork's authenticity. It is a record of its ownership and history to determine if it is an authentic piece of art.
Apadana
Lineage
Provenance
Filing
Intonaco
Provenance
Provenance is a very specific term to determine the ownership history of artworks. It is similar to lineage, but lineage has to do with people and their family trees.
Filing is not the answer, though many who purchase artworks do file ownership certificates or file such assets.
Apadana is a Persian audience hall and Intonaco is the final layer of plaster in Italian frescos.
Example Question #351 : 3 D Art
The architect who built the modernist house in Illinois known as the Farnsworth House was __________.
Philip Johnson
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe
Antoni Gaudi
Frank Lloyd Wright
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe
The Farnsworth House was built outside of Chicago as a rural retreat for a businessman by the German born architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe. Mies, his middle name that he preferred to go by in most settings, was a German immigrant who helped pioneer modernist architecture in America. Using glass, steel, and straight lines, the Farnsworth House was a model and template for further explorations of architecture in America.
Example Question #152 : Architecture
The architectural school founded in Weimar Germany that focused on the synthesis between various art forms was __________.
the École des Beaux-Arts
Postmodernism
the Prairie School
the Bauhaus
the Bauhaus
The Bauhaus was a revolutionary art school, which sought to unite various forms of art under one roof and one set of guidelines based around clean lines, modern techniques, and functionality. The Bauhaus was most influential in the world of architecture, where its modern and simple style inspired achitects around the world. Adolph Hitler and the Nazi Party banned the Bauhaus, and forced its teachers and leaders to find refuge in other nations, which furthered their influence internationally.
Example Question #41 : Renaissance To Contemporary Architecture
The style of artwork developed in Eastern Europe in the twentieth century, which glorified the working class and revolution was __________.
Idealism
Socialist Realism
Regionalism
Expressionism
Socialist Realism
Socialist realism was an artistic movement that grew up hand in hand with communist governments, and particularly Joseph Stalin's rule in the Soviet Union. While called "realism," the artistic style was dedicated to glorifying the working classes and promoting revolution. The "realism" was done in the simplicity of the figures, both in painting and sculpture, as well as in the utility of its architecture.
Example Question #42 : Renaissance To Contemporary Architecture
The architecture guide and manifesto known as Cinq Points de l’Architecture Modern (The Five Points of Modern Architecture) was written by __________.
Philip Johnson
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe
I.M. Pei
Le Corbusier
Le Corbusier
Le Corbusier was one of the most influential modernist architects, not only for the buildings he designed but also for his influential writings on architecture. Le Corbusier's sparse, clean, and functional style was outlined in his manifesto known as The Five Points of Architecture. First published in L'Esprit Nouveau, and found in his longer book Vers un architecture, the points are best expressed in his 1931 building Villa Savoye.