All AP Art History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #111 : Fourteenth Through Sixteenth Century 2 D Art
The figure on the left in the work shown here is _________________.
Mary Magdalene
Saint Anne
the Virgin Mary
Saint Catherine
the Virgin Mary
The Virgin Mary is placed in the left hand portion of this painting, the Madonna and Child with Two Angels by Filippo Lippi. Lippi does many things that are different than traditional portrayals of the Virgin Mary in this work, especially showing her without a shawl on her head and interacting with the Christ child in a more realistic manner. Still, Lippi presents the Virgin Mary in a blue robe, with a halo over her head, and surrounded by angels, all signifiers of the Virgin Mary in art.
Image accessed through Wikipedia Media Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Fra_Filippo_Lippi_-_Madonna_and_Child_with_two_Angels_-_Uffizi.jpg
Example Question #112 : Fourteenth Through Sixteenth Century 2 D Art
The medium in which the work shown here was created was _______________________.
tempera on wood
oil on canvas
watercolor on paper
engraving on metal
tempera on wood
Tempera paint, made from water-soluble binders (usually eggs) and color pigments, was the most common paint form in Europe from the Roman era through about 1500. Tempera paint was valued for its quick drying time and its ability to last. This work, Madonna and Child with Two Angels by Filippo Lippi, is from the last era of tempera painting in Italy, as painting on canvases, which were better applied with oil paints, became more popular a few decades after Lippi’s work.
Image accessed through Wikipedia Media Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Fra_Filippo_Lippi_-_Madonna_and_Child_with_two_Angels_-_Uffizi.jpg
Example Question #113 : Fourteenth Through Sixteenth Century 2 D Art
This work, Jacopo da Pontormo’s Entombment of Christ is placed in ___________________.
a church
a private home
a public square
a palace
a church
The Entombment of Christ depicts the descent of Christ from the cross, one of the Twelve Stations of the Cross. This particular work hangs in the Capponi Chapel, a sixteenth century addition to the much older Church of Saint Felicita in Florence, which was built by the architect by Filippo Brunelleschi. Pontormo’s work was part of a series depicting the Stations of the Cross, in the then vogue mannerist style, which adorned the walls of the brand new chapel.
Image accessed through Wikipedia Media Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Jacopo_Pontormo_004.jpg
Example Question #114 : Fourteenth Through Sixteenth Century 2 D Art
Where is The Last Supper by Leonardo da Vinci located?
Florence Cathedral, in Florence, Italy
Chartres Cathedral, in Chartres, France
The Vatican
Pazzi Chapel, in Florence, Italy
Santa Maria della Grazie church in Milan, Italy
Santa Maria della Grazie church in Milan, Italy
The Last Supper is located in the Santa Maria della Grazie church in Milan, Italy. It is in the refectory, or the area where the monks would eat.
Image is in the public domain, accessed through Wikipedia Media Commons: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Last_Supper_(Leonardo_da_Vinci)#/media/File:%C3%9Altima_Cena_-_Da_Vinci_5.jpg
Example Question #21 : Answering Other Questions About Fourteenth Through Sixteenth Century 2 D Art
What two types of paint did da Vinci use to paint The Last Supper?
Oil and tempera
Acrylic and ink
Oil and acrylic
Oil and watercolor
Tempera and watercolor
Oil and tempera
Da Vinci used oil and tempera paint to create The Last Supper. He also used a double layer of plaster with a white lead undercoat to make the colors brighter.
Image is in the public domain, accessed through Wikipedia Media Commons: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Last_Supper_(Leonardo_da_Vinci)#/media/File:%C3%9Altima_Cena_-_Da_Vinci_5.jpg
Example Question #22 : Answering Other Questions About Fourteenth Through Sixteenth Century 2 D Art
What famous 16th century work depicts Aristotle and Plato at center?
La velata
The School of Athens
Transfiguration
The Parnassus
Three Graces
The School of Athens
The School of Athens by Raphael is the only painting of these five that depicts the two philosophers, as well as many other philosophers of Ancient Greece. The rest are other paintings by Raphael.
Example Question #23 : Answering Other Questions About Fourteenth Through Sixteenth Century 2 D Art
The juxtaposition of the woman holding a balance and the painting of The Last Judgment in the background symbolizes
Vanity
Humility
Betrothal
Damnation
Vanity
The image of Christ in the background is in stark contrast to the woman weighing her jewelry, it is a comment on the contrast between humility and wealth.
Image is in the public domain, accessed through Wikipedia Media Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Johannes_Vermeer_-_Woman_Holding_a_Balance_-_Google_Art_Project.jpg
Example Question #24 : Answering Other Questions About Fourteenth Through Sixteenth Century 2 D Art
The artist uses all of the following techniques in this painting except for _________________.
Underpainting
Hatching
Grisaille
Prestezza
Prestezza
Grisaille, Hatching, and underpainting were all techniques commonly used by Vermeer and the early Dutch painters.
Image is in the public domain, accessed through Wikipedia Media Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Johannes_Vermeer_-_Woman_Holding_a_Balance_-_Google_Art_Project.jpg
Example Question #25 : Answering Other Questions About Fourteenth Through Sixteenth Century 2 D Art
What medium was Venus of Urbino painted in?
Stucco
Oil paint
Terra cotta
Tempera paint
Watercolor paint
Oil paint
Venus of Urbino is painted with oil paint. Titian used thin layers of oil paint to create glazes in this art. Tempera and watercolor are other types of paint, stucco is a particular style of painting that involves plasterwork, and terra cotta is a type of porous clay often used for ceramics.
Image is in the public domain, accessed through Wikipedia Media Commons: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/bb/Tiziano_-_Venere_di_Urbino_-_Google_Art_Project.jpg
Example Question #30 : Answering Other Questions About Fourteenth Through Sixteenth Century 2 D Art
The transition of pre-Renaissance to Renaissance artistic patronage was characterized by _______________.
a shift from churchly to secular patronage
a shift from political to churchly patronage
a shift from secular to churchly patronage
None of these; artistic patronage came from the same general place
a shift from churchly to secular patronage
During the Renaissance, a burgeoning middle class created by a robust mercantile, trading, and banking industry began using their new found money to sponsor the creation of art. Though several works of Renaissance art use divine subject matter, the focus was largely on innovation within the art itself, namely the study of perspective, light, color, and the human figure, with a renewed interest and rediscovering of Greek art and culture. Because of this increased access to money, an emphasis on the importance of knowledge, and the increased availability of books, The Renaissance became the most productive and innovative period in the history of Western art. This stems from a fundamental change in the art's patronage, and the knowledge being absorbed by these patrons: whereas before the art was controlled almost entirely by the Church, a newly enlightened population was now calling the patronal shots, resulting in a diversification and innovation of all the arts across the spectrum of media, and a longing for a type of pre-Christian Hellenistic revival.