All AP Art History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #61 : Ancient Through Medieval Architecture
In a mosque, such as the mosque built in Cordoba by Islamic Umayyad royalty exiled from Damascus, the mihrab is __________.
a piece of devotional artwork in a geometric style
a prayer niche indicating the wall of the mosque facing Mecca
a horseshoe-shaped arch common in Islamic architecture
a dome built in a style foreshadowing Gothic cathedral construction
a raised area where the Imam stands during the call to prayer
a prayer niche indicating the wall of the mosque facing Mecca
The mihrab is a prayer niche set in the qibla wall of a mosque, or the wall facing Mecca. It indicates in which direction the congregation must pray.
Example Question #62 : Architecture
A(n) ______________ is a processional walkway around the apse in a basilica church, or the central space in a centrally-planned church.
clerestory
aisle
nave
ambulatory
ambulatory
The processional walkway around the apse of a basilica church is called an ambulatory. It is a continuation of the aisles that run alongside the central space of the nave. Often individual shrines or altars for saints were set up along the ambulatory behind the main altar.
Example Question #851 : Ap Art History
Which term refers to the style of art and architecture that emerged from the unification of Europe under a centralized Christian aesthetic, inaugurating a massive series of building projects as the Church became the chief patron of the arts?
The International Style
Romanesque Architecture
Gothic Architecture
Byzantine Architecture
Romanesque Architecture
The Romanesque movement inaugurated the great building projects of the church. Though Byzantine, Gothic, and International style movements are likewise responsible for many of Europe's greatest holy buildings, they are all continuations of and evolutions from the Romanesque style. This question requires students to know the chronology of their aesthetic movements.
Example Question #852 : Ap Art History
Semi-circular arches from the first millenneum CE are a common feature of European churches in the style of architecture known as __________.
Gothic
Romanesque
Classical
Byzantine
Romanesque
Romanesque churches dominated European architecture from sometime in the mid-to-late first millennium CE until about 1200. Romanesque churches were massive stone edifices that were marked out by having their doors and windows constructed out of simple semi-circular arches. Romanesque architecture was largely supplanted by the much more ornate and imposing Gothic style in the late Middle Ages.
Example Question #853 : Ap Art History
The sides of a door or window frame, often decorated with sculpture in medieval churches, is called a _____________.
tympanum
jamb
cornice
portal
jamb
The side of a window frame or doorway in a medieval church is called a jamb. In medieval churches, the portal (or entrance way) often was elaborated with decorative sculpture on every available surface, including the jamb and the tympanum, the semi-circular or triangular wall space over a door.
Example Question #854 : Ap Art History
In what part of the world is this building located?
Western Europe
North Africa
Eastern Asia
The Middle East
The Middle East
This is the Hagia Sophia. It is located in Istanbul, on the Black Sea, in Turkey. There are hints of the location of the work in the style of the building. Consider the domed top, mixed with the towers on the corner. It is a unique blending of Greek and Islamic artistic influence.
Image adapted from http://www.publicdomainpictures.net/hledej.php?hleda=hagia+sophia+5.
Example Question #855 : Ap Art History
Fill in the blank.
The given image contains a medium for decoration commonly found in churches. This is an example of a(n) __________________ work.
apse
stained glass
tapestry
mosaic
oculus
stained glass
This is an example of stained glass. The test taker can identify this as the glass decorations are colored to produce depictions of Religious figures and designs.
An apse is a recess in a church where the altar often is; an oculus is not related to glass work, but related to church construction.
Tapestries and mosaics are of different mediums than glass: cloth and tile, respectively.
Image is in the public domain, accessed through Wikipedia Media Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Chartres_-_cath%C3%A9drale_-_rosace_nord.jpg
Example Question #856 : Ap Art History
The material of the building is __________.
brick
concrete
limestone
Ashlar stone
Ashlar stone
Ashlar stone is a popular building material in this part of the world. It was cut into huge slabs that were then rested atop one other. It was meant to make the interior and exterior of the space appear seamless and smooth. It is the answer to the Roman's concrete recipe.
Image adapted from http://www.publicdomainpictures.net/hledej.php?hleda=hagia+sophia+5.
Example Question #857 : Ap Art History
Which Holy Roman Emperor started a cultural revival within the Christian artistic tradition in the late eighth century, divorcing the Church's aesthetic of that deemed the "barbaric style" and inaugurating a movement culminating in the Christianization of central Europe?
Charlemagne
Otto the Great
Lothair II
Frederick II
Charlemagne
Charlemagne, who was crowned in 774, is responsible for this movement. Though his work was continued and evolved under Otto the Great, Charlemagne is ultimately the originator of the codification of the Christian style. This not only created an aesthetic framework for his empire, but also politically united a continent under a religious artistic philosophy. This question requires students to both know their history and to recognize the deep connection between political power and Christian art, setting the tone for the religiously-rooted power struggles that defined much of the Middle Ages.
Example Question #858 : Ap Art History
What event most significantly affected the role of Christianity in the Western world, and radically altered the aesthetic of religious art?
The Birth of Jesus in Bethlehem
The declaration of Jesus' divinity in the third century
The Resurrection of Christ
The Conversion of Constantine
The Conversion of Constantine
The conversion of Constantine changed the Christian religion from an increasingly popular cult within the empire to the declared faith of the most powerful man on Earth. Positions of authority within the church became positions of authority within Roman government (In fact, the contemporary outfits for priests and bishops directly correlate to styles popular with Roman aristocracy), endowing Christians with the financial means to become patrons of the arts. Churches, which became monumental artistic commissions, began to appear all over Europe, as Christianity went from the religion of the marginalized to that of the aristocracy. All of these massive changes would have been impossible without the conversion of Constantine, who effectively turned Romanization into Christianization.