All AP Art History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #363 : 3 D Art
This architect is known for his prairie and organic styles. He was also the architect of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York.
Alden B. Dow
Philip Johnson
Frank Gehry
Frank Lloyd Wright
Walter Gropius
Frank Lloyd Wright
Though many of these architects are known for either their prairie or organic styles, Wright designed the Guggenheim.
Example Question #13 : Identifying Artists, Works, Or Schools Of Twentieth And Twenty First Century Architecture
The spire of the Chrysler Building (William Van Allen 1928-30) in New York city is a well-known example of which 20th-century artistic and architectural style?
Art Nouveau
Art Deco
Rococo
Neoclassicism
Gothic
Art Deco
The Chrysler Building in New York City is a well-known example of the Art Deco artistic and architectural style. Art Deco is known for its bold, geometrical shapes, rather than the organic, flowing style of Art Nouveau, or the Greek-and-Roman-derivation of Neoclassicism. Art Deco was not intricate or natural. It embraced technology and the modern world, and reflected the glamour and luxury that modern technology provided.
The Chrysler building is a good example of Art Deco architecture, as its spire is composed of symmetrical, bold, powerful geometrical shapes. It also makes sense that Art Deco, which represented glamour and luxury, would be used in that time period to build a skyscraper in New York, which in and of itself is a representation of the modern world.
Rococo and Gothic architecture are not from the 20th century.
Image accessed through Wikipedia Image Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Chrysler_Building_by_David_Shankbone_Retouched.jpg
Example Question #958 : Ap Art History
The modernist home in Pennsylvania known as Fallingwater was designed by ______________________.
Mies van der Rohe
Frank Lloyd Wright
I.M. Pei
Philip Johnson
Frank Lloyd Wright
Frank Lloyd Wright built Fallingwater outside of Pittsburgh in 1935 for the owner of a Pittsburgh department store, Edgar Kauffman. Kauffman desired a specific, small plot of land to be used and wanted very specific elements. In order to build a large house in a tight space, Wright used a revolutionary cantilevered approach in his design, also incorporating natural elements like a waterfall, giving the building its name.
Example Question #51 : Renaissance To Contemporary Architecture
Which of the following can be accurately applied to the work of Frank Lloyd Wright?
He is known for his use of curves and rounded windows
His early works served as models for future 20th century skyscrapers
He wanted his buildings to blend harmoniously with their settings
Each building showcases a blend of chrome and natural wood
He wanted his buildings to blend harmoniously with their settings
The long, low Robie House which Wright created to match its prairie setting is a good example of how he matched design to fit surroundings. He felt the building should make the area even more beautiful than before its construction. His "Fallingwater" house in PA is another example of architecture matching its setting.
Example Question #961 : Ap Art History
In designing the vacation home known as Fallingwater, Frank Lloyd Wright was heavily influenced by ___________________.
Japanese architecture
Gothic architecture
Baroque architecture
Egyptian architecture
Japanese architecture
While Fallingwater is a thoroughly modern building, constructed in straight lines made out of concrete, glass, and steel, Frank Lloyd Wright was heavily inspired by Japanese architecture. Fallingwater was designed as a natural retreat for its owners, which meant Wright had to carefully blend the house into nature. Considering its use of natural light and a sense of blending the indoor and outdoor space, the house features many approaches which are borrowed from Japanese architectural ideas.
Example Question #962 : Ap Art History
Le Corbusier's Five Points of Architecture are best captured in the building _____________________.
Monticello
Fallingwater
Farnsworth House
Villa Savoye
Villa Savoye
Le Corbusier was both a practicing architect and an architectural theorist. These two identities were best joined in his design and construction of Villa Savoye outside of Paris. The building intentionally and forcefully followed Le Corbusier's manifesto Five Points of Architecture. The five points Villa Savoye followed were having pilotis that lifted the building off the ground, a functional roof that could be used as a garden, a free floor plan without load bearing walls allowing interior openness, large windows that provided vast amounts of natural light, and freely designed facades that acted merely as a skin on the outside of the building.