All CLEP Humanities Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #61 : Visual Arts
The artists Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, and Jasper Johns all belonged to what artistic movement?
Pop Art
Dadaism
Cubism
Abstract Expressionism
Impressionism
Pop Art
Andy Warhol's most famous works are screen prints of familiar images, often in odd or bright colors. Jasper Johns appropriated national symbols in his paintings, but in altered forms. Roy Lichtenstein directly copied panels from comic books, down to the dialogue. All of these methods are representative of Pop Art, a 1950s and 60s artistic movement that sought to use popular forms and new technologies to change the nature of high art.
Example Question #331 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
Which of the following artists was not a painter known for cubist canvases?
Georges Braque
Pablo Picasso
Juan Gris
Amedeo Modigliani
Fernand Leger
Amedeo Modigliani
Cubism burst onto the art scene in Paris in the first decade of the twentieth century, with various artists creating avant garde images based more on representative shapes and symbols rather than strict representations. Pablo Picasso, Juan Gris, Georges Braques, and Fernand Leger were among its most notable proponents. Amedeo Modigliani was a contemporary of the cubists, but worked in modernist approaches to portraits that featured elongated lines and dark colors.
Example Question #332 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
Which Pablo Picasso painting commemorates a gruesome bombing during the Spanish Civil War?
Las Meninas
The Dream and Lie of Franco
Guernica
Les Demoiselles d'Avignon
The Weeping Woman
Guernica
During the Spanish Civil War, Francisco Franco's nationalist forces were supported by the German military led by the Nazis and Adolf Hitler. In one of the more notable aspects of the war, the German Air Force bombed the Spanish, Republican-held town of Guernica in 1937. That same year, Pablo Picasso made a massive canvas, entirely in black and white, that used gruesome abstract shapes and symbols to convey war's horrors and tragedies. The painting was instantly famous, and caused Picasso to be unable to travel to Franco's Spain.
Example Question #333 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
Salvador Dali belonged to what artistic school?
Pointillism
Cubism
Abstract Expressionism
Impressionism
Surrealism
Surrealism
Salvador Dali's works were defined by realistic-looking objects placed in strange landscapes and weird positions. All of these are hallmarks of surrealism, which was influenced by the burgeoning field of psychotherapy, and drew on dreamlike imagery and situations. Dali helped pioneer surrealism, and remains one of its best-known artists.
Example Question #334 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
Peter Carl Fabergé is an influential artist known for what making what kind of art?
Landscape paintings
Minimalist photography
Ceramic eggs
Portraits of the Russian nobility
Sculpture
Ceramic eggs
Fabergé is known for his ceramic eggs, also known as "Fabergé eggs," which were given as gifts to the Russian nobility during the early twentieth century.
Example Question #32 : Identifying Artists, Works, Or Schools Of Twentieth And Twenty First Century 2 D Art
Guernica was painted by which of the following artists?
Pablo Picasso
Paul Cézanne
Salvador Dali
Edgar Degas
Claude Monet
Pablo Picasso
Pablo Picasso painted Guernica in 1937 in response to Franco's fascist Spain.
Example Question #335 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
The American pop artist who created a piece of art based on the labels on the cans of a certain brand of soup was __________.
Mark Rothko
Jackson Pollack
Andy Warhol
Jasper Johns
Roy Lichtenstein
Andy Warhol
Andy Warhol's 1962 series Campbell's Soup Cans was 32 separate screen-printed paintings of cans of Campbell's soup, each one depicting one of the different varieties Campbell offered at the time. The work featured many of Warhol's hallmarks, including screen-printing, repetition, and the use of commercial imagery. The work was Warhol's first well known piece, and helped launch his career, which would see him as a painter, filmmaker, art theorist, and screen-printer.
Example Question #21 : Identifying Artists, Works, And Schools Of 2 D Visual Art
The pop artist whose most famous works are large canvasses of images taken from comic books is __________.
Robert Rauschenberg
David Hockney
Roy Lichtenstein
Andy Warhol
Jasper Johns
Roy Lichtenstein
Pop Art as a general movement sought to bring post-World War II American popular culture into high art. One of the more famous approaches to this was Roy Lichtenstein's appropriation of comic book imagery. Lichtenstein painted all of his canvases by hand, but would copy one frame from a comic, including shaded dots, dialogue bubbles, and weak colors, onto a large canvas.
Example Question #336 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
Who is the painter whose most famous work features clocks dripping over branches and other figures?
Joan Miró
Pablo Picasso
Salvador Dali
Diego Rivera
Luis Buñuel
Salvador Dali
The Persistence of Memory, completed in 1931 and hanging in the Museum of Modern Art, is widely considered Salvador Dali's masterpiece. The canvas features many of Dali's surrealist hallmarks, with a strange landscape as the background of an image of clocks that appear to be melting over branches and ledges. Dali's work is considered emblematic of surrealism, which drew on Jungian dream theory to create strange images in artwork.
Example Question #22 : Identifying Artists, Works, And Schools Of 2 D Visual Art
Which of the following groupings of artists lists Cubists?
Jackson Pollack, Wassily Kandinsky, Willem de Kooning
Salvador Dalí, Max Ernst, Joan Miró†
Jasper Johns, Robert Rauschenberg, Andy Warhol
Paul Cézanne, Claude Monet, Edouard Manet
Pablo Picasso, Georges Braque, Juan Gris
Pablo Picasso, Georges Braque, Juan Gris
Cubism was a modernist art movement that developed in Paris in the first decades of the twentieth century, by a community of multinational artists. The painters Pablo Picasso and George Braques first created the style, which featured images built out of harsh geometric shapes and used representational images to create broken depictions made up of peculiar shapes. Other important cubists included Fernand Léger, Juan Gris, Robert Delaunay, Jean Metzinger, and Henri Le Fauconnier.