All AP Art History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #131 : Nineteenth Century 2 D Art
Pictured above is a work entitled Impression, Sunrise.
The subject of the work speaks to __________.
a revitalized and industrializing France
the necessity of the fish markets at the port
the harsh and domineering power of industry at the turn of the twentieth century
the melancholy of a hazy morning in working-class France
a revitalized and industrializing France
The painting is neither melancholic nor frightened. It is hazy and light, meant to give the impression of a new day and a new era, especially for a France that was recovering and industrializing after their defeat in the Franco-Prussian war.
Example Question #132 : Nineteenth Century 2 D Art
Pictured above is a work entitled Impression, Sunrise.
The audience of this work was likely __________.
other like-minded artists
the individual who commissioned it
high-society government officials and wealthy patrons
the Parisian social class
other like-minded artists
The impressionist work was not commissioned, and likely would have put off Parisians used to seeing the works at the Salon de Paris. It was highly criticized at the time of its completion, and only appealed to other Impressionists.
Example Question #133 : Nineteenth Century 2 D Art
Pictured above is a work entitled Impression, Sunrise.
The artist of this work most directly influenced all of the following EXCEPT __________.
Camille Pissarro
Berthe Morisot
Paul Gauguin
Mary Cassatt
Paul Gauguin
Paul Gauguin is the only one listed who is not an Impressionist, whose work post-dated Monet's Sunrise. He is a post-impressionist who deviated purposefully from the work of his predecessors.
Example Question #134 : Nineteenth Century 2 D Art
Pictured above is a work entitled Impression, Sunrise.
The piece aims to do all of the following EXCEPT __________.
give an impression of a realistic and symbolic sunrise over the water
draw attention to the industrial power of France
gain recognition and fame for the artist
escape the ennui of the work at the Salon de Paris
gain recognition and fame for the artist
Monet was not popular until much later in his career, and painted as a statement of rebellion instead of as an attempt to gain popularity.
Example Question #135 : Nineteenth Century 2 D Art
Impressionist artists __________.
were immediately embraced by the Salon and the public
began developing their style in Moscow
were untrained amateurs who captured the public's imagination
focused on showing natural light and movement
frequently painted still-life images in private studios
focused on showing natural light and movement
Impressionism as a movement began in Paris, France, and it was initially rejected by the Salon there. Impressionists were trained artists and they often worked outdoors as they tried to capture natural changing light.
Example Question #136 : Nineteenth Century 2 D Art
The setting of this painting is significant for which of the following reasons?
The train station presents a scene of everyday life rather than an epic or mythical subject
The color palette is not intended to accurately reflect the reality of the scene
The train station refused to allow artists to work, making the painting done from memory
Trains were usually considered difficult to capture by painters in the nineteenth century
The train station presents a scene of everyday life rather than an epic or mythical subject
The Saint-Lazare Station, Claude Monet's painting depicted here, shows trains pulling into a major train station in Paris. Fitting with his prominent role in the Impressionist movement, Claude Monet often chose to paint every day scenes like agricultural fields and cityscapes. This stood in stark contrast to previous generations of artists who preferred historical, mythical, or religious subjects when including human figures and large-scale landscapes when painting outdoor scenes.
Image is in the public domain, accessed through Wikipedia Media Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Claude_Monet_004.jpg
Example Question #137 : Nineteenth Century 2 D Art
JMW Turner's The Slave Ship was created to advance the causes of what political movement?
Abolitionism
Chartism
Temperance
Women's Suffrage
Abolitionism
Although romantic in sweep and not fully representational in form, JMW Turner's painting portrays a ship throwing over a number of dead bodies to lose weight during a storm. Titled The Slave Ship, the painting was a deliberate political statement by Turner, who was an ardent abolitionist, an opponent of slavery. Although painted after the British Empire had banned slave trading, Turner hoped that displaying the work in front of Prince Albert, Consort to Queen Victoria, would make the Royal Couple promote abolitionism worldwide when it was first exhibited in 1840.
Image is in the public domain, accessed through Wikipedia Media Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Slave-ship.jpg
Example Question #138 : Nineteenth Century 2 D Art
The work shown here is most influenced by the traditions of ___________________.
portraiture
landscapes
history painting
genre painting
genre painting
The Coiffure by Mary Cassatt shows a woman fixing her hair in front of a mirror, an everyday scene which is captured by the artist in a candid moment. This subject is highly similar to the conventions of "genre painting," which is a European tradition of depicting small moments from everyday life that originated in the sixteenth century. "Genre painting" was seen as the lowest subject matter for art until the Impressionists upended the hierarchy of subjects in the late nineteenth century, a fact hugely influential on Mary Cassatt.
Image is in the public domain, accessed through Wikipedia Media Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Mary_Cassatt_-_The_Coiffure_-_NGC_29882.jpg
Example Question #139 : Nineteenth Century 2 D Art
What 19th century painter created 29 known portraits of Hortense Fiquet (his wife) over a period of over two decades?
Monet
Manet
Gauguin
Cezanne
Renoir
Cezanne
Cezanne's series of portraits of his wife, brought together in a recent Metropolitan Museum of Art exhibit called "Madame Cezanne," ranged in medium from watercolor to graphite to oil. Several of the portraits feature Madame Cezanne in red or blue dresses, sitting in an armchair.
Example Question #140 : Nineteenth Century 2 D Art
Artist Mary Cassatt developed an intense friendship with what painter whose main inspiration was the world of ballet?
Matisse
Picasso
Degas
Lautrec
O'Keefe
Degas
Cassatt and Degas were close friends who shared sensibilities, techniques, and subjects (Cassatt did a series of paintings depicting the world of theatre). Though Matisse painted the well-known "Dance," neither he nor the others are associated with ballet the way Degas is.
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