AP Art History : Nineteenth Century 2D Art

Study concepts, example questions & explanations for AP Art History

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Example Questions

Example Question #21 : Nineteenth Century 2 D Art

Joseph_mallord_william_turner__english_-_the_burning_of_the_houses_of_lords_and_commons__october_16__1834_-_google_art_project

The artist of this work heavily influenced the later movement known as __________.

Possible Answers:

Impressionism

Cubism

Dadaism.

Fauvism

Correct answer:

Impressionism

Explanation:

J. M. W. Turner was constantly playing with paint and texture to capture light and feeling to enhance the emotion in his paintings. The fire engulfing the buildings in The Burning of the Houses of Lords and Commons is painted in vivid and easily seen brushstrokes, which are then reflected in the water. This use of paint and light in naturalistic settings was a formative influence on all of the Impressionists, who deeply studied Turner.

 

Figure: The Burning of the Houses of Lords and Commons by J. M. W. Turner (1834-5)

Example Question #22 : Nineteenth Century 2 D Art

Joseph_mallord_william_turner__english_-_the_burning_of_the_houses_of_lords_and_commons__october_16__1834_-_google_art_project

This work exhibits a theme of __________.

Possible Answers:

the triumph of Western civilization

the political corruption of Parliament

nature's power over humanity

a deep religious faith

Correct answer:

nature's power over humanity

Explanation:

J. M. W. Turner frequently painted fires, winds, rain, ash, and snow, and particularly showed these forces dominating a human figure or human creation. Therefore, the burning of Parliament in 1834 let him show one of his favored themes, nature's power over humanity. The Burning of the Houses of Lords and Commons shows neither of the said Houses of Parliament, but does show an out-of-control fire spreading towards bridges and boats on the River Thames.

 

Figure: The Burning of the Houses of Lords and Commons by J. M. W. Turner (1834-5)

Example Question #23 : Nineteenth Century 2 D Art

Joseph_mallord_william_turner__english_-_the_burning_of_the_houses_of_lords_and_commons__october_16__1834_-_google_art_project

The effect of the fire in this work is created by __________.

Possible Answers:

open brushwork

use of mixed media

paint mixing

use of wood as the painting surface

Correct answer:

open brushwork

Explanation:

One of the signature techniques utilized by J. M. W. Turner was a consistent use of open brushstrokes to capture movement and natural effects. The open brushstrokes allowed Turner to layer paint and make a less-detailed shape for images such as fire, steam, and storms. This particular effect was also heavily employed by the Impressionists in the later nineteenth century in France.

 

Figure: The Burning of the Houses of Lords and Commons by J. M. W. Turner (1834-5)

Example Question #24 : Nineteenth Century 2 D Art

Joseph_mallord_william_turner__english_-_the_burning_of_the_houses_of_lords_and_commons__october_16__1834_-_google_art_project

The work was created in the period __________.

Possible Answers:

1840-1860

1780-1800

1800-1820

1820-1840

Correct answer:

1820-1840

Explanation:

This painting, The Burning of the Houses of Lords and Commons, was one of the key paintings that helped develop J. M. W. Turner's later style. While Turner always preferred sweeping landscapes with dramatic brushwork, by the 1830s, Turner was capturing natural disasters such as this fire with more abstract forms and innovative lighting techniques. The 1834 fire at Britain's Parliament, which engulfed both the seat of government and a large swath of London, was a natural subject for Turner to use these new techniques.

 

Figure: The Burning of the Houses of Lords and Commons by J. M. W. Turner (1834-5)

Example Question #25 : Nineteenth Century 2 D Art

Paul gauguin   d ou venons nous

The blue idol in this painting is meant to indicate what?

Possible Answers:

Isolation

Religion

Promise

The artist himself

Death

Correct answer:

The artist himself

Explanation:

According to Paul Gauguin, the blue idol is meant to represent himself as "The Beyond." When painting this work, he was extremely distraught over the death of his daughter. As a result, he intended to commit suicide upon the completion of the work.

Example Question #26 : Nineteenth Century 2 D Art

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Paul gauguin   d ou venons nous

What artistic convention does the bottom work reject that the top work follows?

Possible Answers:

Warm-cool relationships between foreground and background

Classic color relationships

Linear perspective

Eliminating the "hand of the artist"

Chiaroscuro light and dark

Correct answer:

Linear perspective

Explanation:

While van Gogh takes liberties with the movement of his paint, he maintains strict perspective in his painting of cypress trees. On the other hand, Gauguin rejects these rules and plays with the notion of space amongst his subjects.

Example Question #27 : Nineteenth Century 2 D Art

Paul gauguin   d ou venons nous

This image is meant to express what thematic progression?

Possible Answers:

Spiritual services

Daily life

Life from beginning to end

Development of community

The cooking of food

Correct answer:

Life from beginning to end

Explanation:

Gauguin stipulated that painting be read right to left. Starting with childbirth, proceeding to the toils of young adulthood, to an elderly woman lost in her own thoughts, the painting is meant to depict the progression of life. Gauguin essayed to take his own life by consuming arsenic upon finishing the painting, an attempt that proved unsuccessful.

Example Question #28 : Nineteenth Century 2 D Art

Claude monet 004

The use of quick, visible brushstrokes by this artist most significantly allowed _________________.

Possible Answers:

for the details of the train station to be more clearly drawn

for the viewer to see the scene as more grand than it is in reality

for the artist to show off his drafting skills

for the smoke from the train engine to be better captured

Correct answer:

for the smoke from the train engine to be better captured

Explanation:

The use of highly visible, quick brushstrokes by Impressionists had two distinct advantages, creating a sense of motion in the painting and allowing the artist to capture light changes as he was painting outdoors. In Claude Monet's The Saint Lazare Station, the smoke billowing off the engines of the train are more realistically captured with the quick brushstrokes as they create a motion and a texture more consistent with smoke's real life properties.

Image is in the public domain, accessed through Wikipedia Media Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Claude_Monet_004.jpg

Example Question #29 : Nineteenth Century 2 D Art

Slave ship

JMW Turner's use of visible brush strokes in the Slave Ship conveys ____________________.

Possible Answers:

natural motion and light

the horrors of the slave trade

the majesty of sailing

the depth of ocean waters

Correct answer:

natural motion and light

Explanation:

JMW Turner's work is titled The Slave Ship, but its central feature is sunlight coming through the haze of an oncoming storm on an ocean, which threatens the ship, causing the slave traders to throw over dead bodies to lose weight. The chaos and motion of this moment is captured by Turner through vivid brushstrokes that blend with one another throughout the painting.

Image is in the public domain, accessed through Wikipedia Media Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Slave-ship.jpg

Example Question #30 : Nineteenth Century 2 D Art

Cassatt coiffure

Based on style and composition, The Coiffure, by Mary Cassatt, is influenced by the artistic traditions of ____________________.

Possible Answers:

India

Japan

Persia

Egypt

Correct answer:

Japan

Explanation:

The Japanese tradition of ukiyo-e is an artistic movement which depicted simple, everyday scenes with a focus on highlight the subtle beauty of nature and life. All of these aspects are also very much present in Mary Cassatt's The Coiffure, which very delicately presents a woman fixing her hair in a scene that seems like a candid moment. Japanese artistic traditions were only discovered by European artists in the late 19th century, and Japanese art became highly influential among avant-garde artists in the last decades of the twentieth century.

Image is in the public domain, accessed through Wikipedia Media Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Mary_Cassatt_-_The_Coiffure_-_NGC_29882.jpg

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