All AP Art History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #2 : Renaissance To Contemporary Sculpture
the following image is public domain, and can be found at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_(Donatello)#/media/File:Florence_-_David_by_Donatello.jpg
The work demonstrates Donatello's interest in __________.
new artistic styles and figural forms
Italian Christian society
the human body
All of these
All of these
Donatello had a clear interest in the human form. Many believed when he unveiled the piece that it had to have been done in life, it was so true to form. He also, though, was the first of his kind to use bronze in a freestanding nude (this hasn't been done since the Classical era). He is finally making a statement of Italian society, and the importance of blending Christian art and modernizing life.
Example Question #1 : Analyzing Fourteenth Through Sixteenth Century Sculpture
Who is the subject of this sculpture, a popular figure in Renaissance art?
John the Baptist
Moses
Samson
David
Hercules
David
This is David, also sculpted by artists like Donatello and Michelangelo. The head of Goliath sits at David's feet. John the Baptist was also beheaded, but by Salome, a woman. Hercules and Samson tend to be represented with more muscularity, and Moses is usually an older figure.
Work is in the public domain, accessed through WikiArt: http://www.wikiart.org/en/andrea-del-verrocchio/david-1475
Example Question #1 : Renaissance To Contemporary Sculpture
Michelangelo's David displays this compositional technique, wherein the figure's posture is tense on one side and relaxed on the other because its weight is shifted disproportionately to one foot.
Formal balance
Figura serpentinata
Contrappusto
Interaxial balance
Contrappusto
"Contrappusto" (meaning counterpose in Italian) is the term used to describe a posture in which the figure's weight is shifted to one foot, causing the shoulders and hips to twist off the body's central axis so they are no longer parallel, as seen in David. It was introduced in Classical Greek art and rediscovered in the Renaissance.
Example Question #1 : Renaissance To Contemporary Sculpture
Equestrian statues were favored by absolute monarchs in the seventeenth century because __________.
they conveyed a sense of grandeur and power about the monarch being depicted
they depicted the subject as an everyday person
they showed the subject interacting with a lowly animal
they showed that the subject was an expert rider of horses
they conveyed a sense of grandeur and power about the monarch being depicted
Equestrian statues, even when life-size, created a portrait of their subjects on massive scales. While commonplace in Rome, they were hardly made after the fall of Rome until the Renaissance, and in the age of absolutism in the seventeenth century, they were made all across Europe to commemorate and celebrate monarchs. These statues made the monarchs depicted in them appear intimidating, grandiose, and worthy of their position as absolute monarchs.
Example Question #3 : Renaissance To Contemporary Sculpture
the following image is public domain, and can be found at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_(Donatello)#/media/File:Florence_-_David_by_Donatello.jpg
The sculptor of this work is ___________.
Leonardo da Vinci
Michelangelo
Bernini
Donatello
Donatello
This work is Donatello's David. It predates the Davids of both Michelangelo as well as Bernini. Donatello was known among his colleagues for his freestanding work, and had in fact created a freestanding marble version of David that predates even this one. That David, though, was not nude where this one clearly is.
Example Question #111 : 3 D Art
the following image is public domain, and can be found at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_(Donatello)#/media/File:Florence_-_David_by_Donatello.jpg
The subject of the work is ___________.
Socrates
Saul
David
John the Baptist
David
This sculpture is a depiction of David, the young man who defeated the Giant Goliath in the First Testament story of the bible. He can be identified by his youthful appearance (David was one of the only youths being depicted at the time, apart from the baby Jesus). He can also be identified through his pose, where he stands atop the severed head of the giant Goliath, as the victor in their battle.
Example Question #1 : Fourteenth Through Sixteenth Century Sculpture
the following image is public domain, and can be found at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_(Donatello)#/media/File:Florence_-_David_by_Donatello.jpg
The medium of the work is __________.
nickel
obsidian
bronze
marble
bronze
As is traditional, Donatello's statue is made of bronze, after the practice of Classical Greece. Though marble is a more popular medium later (it is cheaper and its whiteness appealed to the Renaissance masters), the freestanding bronze works are a testament to the renewed interest in Classical works.
Example Question #4 : Renaissance To Contemporary Sculpture
Which Early Renaissance Italian sculptor influenced later sculptors with his characteristic "figura serpentinata" forms?
Lorenzo Ghiberti
Donato di Niccolò di Betto Bardi (Donatello)
Filippo Brunelleschi
Andrea Pisano
Donato di Niccolò di Betto Bardi (Donatello)
Sculptures by Donatello (ca. 1386–1466) often feature a spiraling "figura serpentinata" composition style that entices the viewer to move around the piece to view it from every angle. Sculptors who came after him often used this technique, and it could be said that he introduced it.
Example Question #112 : 3 D Art
Michelangelo's statue known as the Pietà is remarkable for its depiction of the Virgin Mary as __________.
extremely youthful
completely exultant
horrifically ancient
remarkably unattractive
extremely youthful
Michelangelo's Pietà follows the traditional theme of such pieces of art by having the Virgin Mary cradling a dead Jesus Christ after his crucifixion. Michelangelo depicted Mary in stunning realism for the sixteenth century, while also presenting her as extremely youthful. Michelangelo claimed that a completely chaste woman would hardly age, despite being the mother of a thirty-three year old man.
Example Question #1 : Fourteenth Through Sixteenth Century Sculpture
the following image is public domain, and can be found at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_(Donatello)#/media/File:Florence_-_David_by_Donatello.jpg
Who was the likely patron of this work?
The artist himself
A wealthy private family
The Catholic church
David
A wealthy private family
Given the nature of the work (David is nude and sensually posed), the patron was unlikely to be the Church. Though it was not wholly unusual later to see the church represent its prominent figures in the nude or seminude, this particular piece predates that. Donatello also would not have had the resources to commission this work himself, and David is a biblical figure. It is believed, actually, that the Medici family commissioned the piece for their courtyard.
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