All AP Art History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1 : Understanding Terminology That Describes Twentieth And Twenty First Century Sculpture
Found object art ___________.
challenges the viewer to consider what makes something "art" and, like Pop Art, can put everyday items in a new light as a result
can frequently be found in the most popular creations of Renaissance masters like Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo
created a widely-accepted art movement--Illusionism--that forced viewers to reconcile the seen with the unseen
was, like Futurism, a brief artistic movement that thrived in the years between the First and Second World Wars
None of the answers are correct.
challenges the viewer to consider what makes something "art" and, like Pop Art, can put everyday items in a new light as a result
Found object art, or art that incorporates already made materials, is a form of art that often elicits controversy over what "art" really is--while it began as a conscious technique early in the twentieth century, it continues on today.
Example Question #32 : Renaissance To Contemporary Sculpture
Marcel Duchamp's coined the term "readymade" to describe sculptures made using ________________.
None of these
objects from other countries
objects created by a team of artists working in an assembly line
stolen objects
ordinary manufactured objects
ordinary manufactured objects
Readymades were everyday objects that were chosen and then adjusted by the artist before being put on display. Examples include Duchamp's own provocative "Fountain," which was simply a urinal. He saw this as a response to so-called "retinal art," or art that only affected its viewers through sight.
Example Question #8 : Twentieth And Twenty First Century Sculpture
The American sculptor known for making large, stainless steel figures with a mirror finish, usually of kitsch and pop culture subjects, is named __________.
Jeff Koons
Damien Hirst
George Segal
Mike Leavitt
Jeff Koons
Jeff Koons is a controversial modern sculptor, as he has often turned his eye to pop culture subjects considered outside the realm of high art. Notably, he has a series called "Banality," and has constructed immense metallic sculptures of balloons twisted into animal shapes. While his subjects tend to be "lighter" compared to his contemporaries, like George Segal, Koons' skill with steel and his non-traditional subjects have been highly influential on younger generations of artists, including Damien Hirst and Mike Leavitt.
Example Question #1 : Identifying Artists, Works, Or Schools Of Twentieth And Twenty First Century Sculpture
Which twentieth-century artist is responsible for the 1917 sculpture Fountain, which features a urinal?
Francis Picabia
Marcel Duchamp
Man Ray
Reginald Mutt
Pablo Picasso
Marcel Duchamp
Duchamp is responsible for this three-dimensional art piece. The piece was signed "R. Mutt," but the origin of this signature is still debated, though it is said to stand for Richard Mutt.
Example Question #731 : Ap Art History
Where was Christo and Jeanne-Claude's installation art piece The Gates located when installed?
London's Hyde Park
New York's Union Square Park
Chicago's Millenium Park
Los Angeles's Griffith Park
New York's Central Park
New York's Central Park
Christo and Jeanne-Claude's installation art piece The Gates was set up in 2005.
Image accessed through Wikipedia Media Commons: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Gates#/media/File:Gates_a.jpg
Example Question #41 : Renaissance To Contemporary Sculpture
Dan Flavin was well-known for his art composed of what commonplace objects?
Vacuums
Fluorescent light tubes
Trash
Telephones
Urinals
Fluorescent light tubes
Dan Flavin's fluorescent light tube sculptures used the objects' eerie glow to give the area around them an unusual energy. Marcel Duchamp is famous for his urinal readymade "Fountain," while Jeff Koons employed vacuums in his early work. Dali created a Lobster Telephone, and trash art is a genre unto itself.
Example Question #41 : Renaissance To Contemporary Sculpture
Kara Walker's 2014 "A Subtlety" was a sugar sculpture depicting a woman in the pose of what creature?
Centaur
Dragon
Unicorn
Mermaid
Sphinx
Sphinx
"A Subtlety" was housed in an old sugar plant and depicted a slave woman naked except for a headscarf in the pose of a Sphinx. The sculpture fused ancient art with the abuses of American slavery in a massive sculpture.
Example Question #144 : Sculpture
______________ is the Pop Artist best known for "Pop Sculpture."
Andy Warhol
Claes Oldenburg
Roy Lichtenstein
James Rosenquist
Claes Oldenburg
Claes Oldenburg is best known for Pop Art sculptures of everyday objects and more specifically his "soft sculptures". His soft sculptures consisted of creating large, everyday objects so they collapse like a deflating balloon.
Example Question #42 : Renaissance To Contemporary Sculpture
Michelangelo’s sculpture, David, was constructed under the patronage of __________.
the Papacy
the King of Sicily
the Duomo of Florence
the King of France
the Duomo of Florence
The Italian Renaissance began in the city-states of Northern Italy, which were ruled over by no king, as a larger project of enhancing their authority. The David was made by Michelangelo to fulfill a contract with the Overseers of the Office of Works of the Duomo, which was the cathedral of Florence. The David's subtle turn, wary glare, and perfect form helped the stature to become a symbol for Florence.
Example Question #43 : Renaissance To Contemporary Sculpture
Which of the following elements was NOT a key feature of Marcel Duchamp's sculptural works?
Found objects
Classical themes
Easy replicability
Everyday subjects
Classical themes
Beginning in 1914 and continuing until his death in 1968, the French artist Marcel Duchamp created sculptures he termed "readymades." Duchamp took essentially everyday objects and mounted them as sculptural pieces in galleries. The pieces grew to be less found objects and more objects built to look like common items, often presented with absurd or humorous titles.