Nineteenth Century 2D Art
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AP Art History › Nineteenth Century 2D Art
The Coiffure, by Mary Cassatt, is related to the artistic movement _____________________.
Impressionism
Fauvism
Neo-Classicalism
Surrealism
Explanation
Mary Cassatt was the only American woman to be actively involved as an artist in the late nineteenth century French avant-garde art movements. While this work is not traditionally impressionistic, especially as it is a drypoint print rather than a painting, it shares many similarities in tone and style to the works of the Impressionists Cassatt worked so closely with in France. Most notably, the influence of Japanese art, the everyday subject, and the free lines are hallmarks of Impressionism as an artistic movement.
Image is in the public domain, accessed through Wikipedia Media Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Mary\_Cassatt\_-\_The\_Coiffure\_-\_NGC\_29882.jpg
The Coiffure, by Mary Cassatt, is related to the artistic movement _____________________.
Impressionism
Fauvism
Neo-Classicalism
Surrealism
Explanation
Mary Cassatt was the only American woman to be actively involved as an artist in the late nineteenth century French avant-garde art movements. While this work is not traditionally impressionistic, especially as it is a drypoint print rather than a painting, it shares many similarities in tone and style to the works of the Impressionists Cassatt worked so closely with in France. Most notably, the influence of Japanese art, the everyday subject, and the free lines are hallmarks of Impressionism as an artistic movement.
Image is in the public domain, accessed through Wikipedia Media Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Mary\_Cassatt\_-\_The\_Coiffure\_-\_NGC\_29882.jpg
Figure 1
Figure 2
The farthest left figure in the image on the right is probably __________
a servant.
a banker.
an art dealer.
an artist.
Explanation
It is widely known that in The Meeting, Gustave Courbet painted himself, his art dealer Alfred Buyas, and Buyas' servant Calas, largely because of how accurate Courbet's depictions were. Even without the background knowledge, many things indicate the status of Calas. His clothes are shabbier than his companion's, and he defers to the figure in the middle with his head bowed.
The work was created in the period __________.
1820-1840
1800-1820
1780-1800
1840-1860
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)
Figure 3 Figure 4
The painting in Figure 4 portrays its subject as __________.
uncompromising
indifferent
nervous
relaxed
Explanation
Fitting for an official portrait of the country's greatest military hero, Sir Thomas Lawrence's portrait of General Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington, portrays him in a serious, uncompromising position. His serious demeanor is paired with his stiff pose, showing his arms crossed in front of him. In this portrait, Wellington is presented simply in front of a plain background, with little but his uniform to accent his own image and pose.
Figure 3: Napoleon Crossing the Alps by Jaques-Louis David (1801)
Figure 4: Portrait of Sir Arthur Wellesley, First Duke of Wellington by Sir Thomas Lawrence (1814)
Figure 1
Figure 2
The farthest left figure in the image on the right is probably __________
a servant.
a banker.
an art dealer.
an artist.
Explanation
It is widely known that in The Meeting, Gustave Courbet painted himself, his art dealer Alfred Buyas, and Buyas' servant Calas, largely because of how accurate Courbet's depictions were. Even without the background knowledge, many things indicate the status of Calas. His clothes are shabbier than his companion's, and he defers to the figure in the middle with his head bowed.
The use of a black dress allowed the artist to highlight the subject's __________.
pale skin
respectable pose
upper-class manners
position in society
Explanation
John Singer Sargent painted his "Madame X," the socialite Virginie Amélie Avegno Gautreau, in a black dress in a simple room with no accessories. The use of the black dress stands in stark contrast to the subject's pale skin, which also emphasizes just how much of the subject's skin Sargent is exposing by painting her in such a dress.
Image: Portrait of Madame X by John Singer Sargent (1883-4)
Figure 3 Figure 4
The painting in Figure 4 portrays its subject as __________.
uncompromising
indifferent
nervous
relaxed
Explanation
Fitting for an official portrait of the country's greatest military hero, Sir Thomas Lawrence's portrait of General Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington, portrays him in a serious, uncompromising position. His serious demeanor is paired with his stiff pose, showing his arms crossed in front of him. In this portrait, Wellington is presented simply in front of a plain background, with little but his uniform to accent his own image and pose.
Figure 3: Napoleon Crossing the Alps by Jaques-Louis David (1801)
Figure 4: Portrait of Sir Arthur Wellesley, First Duke of Wellington by Sir Thomas Lawrence (1814)
The work was created in the period __________.
1820-1840
1800-1820
1780-1800
1840-1860
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)
The use of a black dress allowed the artist to highlight the subject's __________.
pale skin
respectable pose
upper-class manners
position in society
Explanation
John Singer Sargent painted his "Madame X," the socialite Virginie Amélie Avegno Gautreau, in a black dress in a simple room with no accessories. The use of the black dress stands in stark contrast to the subject's pale skin, which also emphasizes just how much of the subject's skin Sargent is exposing by painting her in such a dress.
Image: Portrait of Madame X by John Singer Sargent (1883-4)