Deck 31: Mid-to Late Nineteenth-century Art in Europe and the United States

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Question
A common theme among Symbolist artists was ____________.

A) Egyptian culture
B) irrational fears and desires
C) the idealized landscape
D) primitive cultures
Use Space or
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Question
What device had artists used since the late Renaissance to project images for reproduction?

A) the camera obscura
B) the daguerreotype
C) negatives
D) lithographs
Question
In order to emphasize the abstract nature of his paintings, Whistler often chose titles that were more commonly used in ________.

A) psychology
B) music
C) poetry
D) mathematics
Question
Winslow Homer employed an unadorned realism in depicting the heroic struggles of ____________.

A) African-Americans
B) the working poor
C) soldiers in the Civil War
D) young male athletes
Question
__________ artists were committed to painting the modern world honestly.

A) Art Nouveau
B) Symbolist
C) Realist
D) Romantic
Question
Rossetti was one of the leaders of the __________ Brotherhood.

A) Romantic
B) Pre-Raphaelite
C) Impressionist
D) Symbolist
Question
Nineteenth-century Russian artists shared the __________ interest in presenting unflinching looks at grim reality.

A) Realist
B) Symbolist
C) Art Nouveau
D) Impressionist
Question
The Post-Impressionist artists discussed in the text found inspiration from all of the following sources EXCEPT ________.

A) non-western cultures
B) folk art
C) classical art
D) medieval art
Question
What painting characteristic of the juste-milieu style of art so captivated Napoleon III that he purchased it for his private collection?

A) Manet's Olympia
B) Cabanel's The Birth of Venus
C) Rude's The Dance
D) Whistler's Nocturne in Black and Gold
Question
The influence of Japonisme can best be seen in the paintings of which artist?

A) Courbet
B) Moreau
C) Rossetti
D) Van Gogh
Question
Garnering criticism from academicians, Carpeaux's The Dance did not possess the smooth and generalized features of _______________.

A) Neoclassicism
B) juste-milieu
C) Impressionism
D) Orientalism
Question
Courbet's A Burial at Ornans was criticized at the Salon for its disrespect of _________________.

A) his father's death
B) the rules of academic composition
C) his allegiance to the Catholic Church
D) the death of the Academy
Question
__________ and his compatriots designed furniture, stained glass, tiles, wallpaper, and fabrics.

A) Eakins
B) Homer
C) Whistler
D) Morris
Question
Which artist is known for producing portraits of some of Britain's leading intellectuals?

A) Timothy O'Sullivan
B) Henry Fox Talbot
C) Julia Margaret Cameron
D) James Abbott McNeill Whistler
Question
Van Gogh's insistence on his emotional state over fidelity to nature contributed to the development of which subsequent movement in modern art?

A) Symbolism
B) Japonisme
C) Expressionism
D) Art Nouveau
Question
__________ was regarded as one of the most uncompromising American Realists of the era.

A) Eakins
B) Ingres
C) Repin
D) Gross
Question
What significant change occurred in how art was conceptualized and created?

A) Political activism began to play a significant role.
B) Some artists retreated into their own imagination.
C) There was a response among artists to photography.
D) All of the above.
Question
Although it still stands today, the __________ was intended to be a temporary structure erected for the 1889 Universal Exposition.

A) Crystal Palace
B) Paris Opéra
C) Statue of Liberty
D) Eiffel Tower
Question
During the nineteenth century, who were major patrons of the arts?

A) monarchs
B) workers
C) church officials
D) industrialists and entrepreneurs
Question
William Morris's reaction against the mass-production of furniture and other functional objects was rooted in his ____________.

A) desire for his own wealth
B) socialist concerns for industrial workers
C) idea that art was only for the elite
D) religious beliefs
Question
The group of artists called the Société Anonyme des Artistes Peintures, Sculptors, Graveurs, etc. is particularly significant for its role in _____________.

A) promoting the work of women artists as equal to that of their male colleagues
B) the rise of independent exhibitions and gallery system to promote a diverse range of art
C) emphasizing the importance of art to represent the fleeting effects of light and color
D) unifying the avant-garde artists in France
Question
Manet's Olympia was based on a(n) __________ Renaissance source.

A) Netherlandish
B) German
C) Spanish
D) Italian
Question
What common denominator unifies the artists considered Post-Impressionists?

A) They lived in France.
B) Impressionism served as a springboard for their experimentation.
C) They rejected Classical ideas and form.
D) Their work is characterized by heavily built-up areas of paint called impasto.
Question
What impact did the suppression of the Paris Commune have on art after 1871?

A) There was a resurgence in political art.
B) Artists turned to lithography and other printed formats for social critique.
C) Overt political commentary diminished in the art of the avant-garde.
D) Avant-garde artists produce politically charged work anonymously and under pseudonyms.
Question
What about Dejeuner sur L'Herbe was particularly shocking?

A) the depiction of the female nude
B) the references to important artworks of the past
C) the "immoral" subject matter
D) all of the above
Question
Most of the Impressionists painted en plein air, meaning they painted outside the __________.

A) market
B) studio
C) revolution
D) church
Question
While most of the Impressionists were born in France, Mary Cassatt was born in __________.

A) America
B) Japan
C) Portugal
D) Ireland
Question
Which artist, known for depicting idyllic and carefree scenes, summed up the essence of painting by saying, "For me a picture should be a pleasant thing, joyful and pretty-yes pretty!"?

A) Rosa Bonheur
B) Mary Cassatt
C) Edgar Degas
D) Auguste Renoir
Question
In contrast to some of the other Impressionist painters, Renoir focused on the __________.

A) marketplace
B) street light
C) racecar
D) figure
Question
__________ accused Whistler of "flinging pots of paint in the public's face."

A) Morris
B) Ruskin
C) Homer
D) Eakins
Question
Napoleon III developed the Salon des Refusés for artists rejected from the official __________.

A) government
B) opéra
C) Salon
D) church
Question
What was a disadvantage of a daguerreotype?

A) The image was blurred.
B) The image would fade over time.
C) The image could not easily be reproduced.
D) All of the above.
Question
__________ was devoted to anarchist philosophies and developed an exhibition for Impressionists apart from the official Salon.

A) Pissaro
B) Manet
C) Eakins
D) Morris
Question
Although artists in different countries developed their own approach to Realism, what common interest united them?

A) a rejection of Academic standards for art
B) a desire to present an unflinching look at the lives of the working poor
C) a preference for oil painting
D) their political affiliation and activist role in society
Question
What common practice of early photographers, which seems problematic today, did not concern nineteenth century viewers?

A) Subjects were required to sit for extremely long exposure times.
B) Developments in photography were commercially motivated.
C) The chemicals used in photography were extremely toxic.
D) Documentary photographs were sometimes staged.
Question
The artist ____________ was reprimanded by the Ministry of Fine Arts for the sensuality of her figures.

A) Rosa Bonheur
B) Berthe Morisot
C) Camille Claudel
D) Mary Cassatt
Question
The earliest photographers asserted the artistic value of their work by ________________.

A) organizing museum exhibitions of their photographs
B) imitating the subjects and styles of painting
C) signing their names to the bottoms of prints
D) seeking patrons who would support their work
Question
American-born sculptor Edmonia Lewis employed a ________ style to address modern issues such as slavery.

A) Realist
B) Neoclassical
C) Impressionist
D) Symbolist
Question
Although associated with the Academy, Gustave Moreau's sensuous treatment of biblical themes served as a precursor to which art movement?

A) Neo-Impressionism
B) Symbolism
C) Impressionism
D) the Pre-Raphaelites
Question
How does Charles Garnier's Opéra illustrate the Academic practice of historicism?

A) It was built with Classical materials and engineering techniques.
B) Its design was based on Baroque architectural forms.
C) Its primary function was to entertain the French social elite.
D) It was part of urban planning efforts to redesign the medieval city of Paris.
Question
In Degas' The Rehearsal on Stage the seeming arbitrary cropping of figures suggests the influence of _____________.

A) synthetism
B) historicism
C) photography
D) medieval stained glass
Question
Gauguin's interest in __________ led him to give up his affluent lifestyle in search for the more simple pleasures.

A) Japonisme
B) the "primitive"
C) peasants
D) medieval cathedrals
Question
The Belgian artist James Ensor frequently used _______in his terrifying paintings, which combined aspects of Symbolism and Expressionism.

A) weapons
B) femme fatales
C) demons
D) masks
Question
What innovation seen in Rodin's The Burghers of Calais signaled his departure from established traditions of sculpture?

A) The figure grouping is placed at eye-level.
B) The figures show emotional anguish and despair.
C) Rodin suggests their pain through physical discomfort.
D) All of the above
Question
Which artist associated with Realism in the nineteenth century found great success in the Salon system, including receiving France's highest honor of membership in the Legion of Honor?

A) Courbet
B) Manet
C) Bonheur
D) Millet
Question
Cézanne's professed aim of painting was to ______________.

A) evoke a strong emotional reaction from the viewer
B) create an image of pure aesthetic pleasure
C) make of Impressionism something solid and durable
D) capture transitory effects of light and atmosphere
Question
In contrast to the Realists, Impressionist artists focused on scenes of the ______________.

A) religious icons
B) industrial monuments
C) upper middle class at leisure
D) social issues
Question
Antonio Gaudí was the major practitioner of Art Nouveau in Spain, where it was called____________.

A) Divisionism
B) Pointilism
C) Modernismo
D) Symbolism
Question
In what context did the notion of an avant-garde among artists first appear?

A) discussions by bourgeois members of the "café society" in Paris
B) alternative exhibitions of artists who had been rejected by the Salon
C) the writings of Karl Marx
D) in programs of French utopian socialists
Question
Which of the following was NOT part of Impressionist's painting technique?

A) painting en plein air
B) grinding and mixing his own paint
C) working while in a boat
D) rendering changes in light and atmosphere
Question
The reading room at the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris demonstrates the tendency of late nineteenth century architects to ______________.

A) fuse a historicizing approach to form with new technologies
B) reject the use of mass-produced and industrial materials in design
C) explore new architectural forms that could reflect the modern world
D) adhere to the dictum that "form ever follows function"
Question
Reflecting Richard Morris Hunt's architectural training at the École des Beaux-Arts, the ideal American city he designed for the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago was based on the symbolism of __________.

A) the American factory
B) Greek and Roman architecture
C) the skyscraper
D) Gothic cathedrals
Question
Frederick Law Olmstead and Calvert Vaux relied on the English tradition of _______landscaping in designing New York's Central Park.

A) symmetrical
B) picturesque
C) Grand Manner
D) maze
Question
Julia Margaret Cameron was a creative early proponent of portrait __________.

A) lithography
B) photography
C) painting
D) sketches
Question
George Seurat developed a distinctive style of painting that he called ___________.

A) Divisionism
B) Synthetism
C) Orientalism
D) daguerrotype
Question
__________'s famous saying "Form ever follows function" had a significant impact on architectural design in the twentieth century.

A) Victor Horta
B) Charles Garnier
C) Louis Sullivan
D) Antonio Gaudi
Question
In what way was Gustave Courbet's Stonebreakers an explicit political statement?

A) He refused to exhibit it in the Salon.
B) His elevated his lower-class subject to the heroic status afforded history painting.
C) He rejected academic conventions to idealize the subject.
D) He depicted an actual event that spawned violent protests outside the city of Ornans.
Question
Although known best for his lithographed posters, Toulouse-Lautrec's organic forms and hand-drawn letters can be linked most closely to which art movement?

A) Symbolism
B) Arts and Craft Revival
C) Pre-Raphaelites
D) Art Nouveau
Question
The development of structural steel and the ________ were essential to the development of the modern skyscraper.

A) electric elevator
B) pre-cut glass panes
C) ancient techniques of concrete
D) cable car
Question
What was George Seurat's goal in his "Divisionist" paintings?

A) to enliven paintings through the use scientific theories about color and optic function
B) to bring Classical structure to the Impressionists' approach to painting
C) to use color to generate a strong emotional response from the viewer
D) to produce an idiosyncratic style characterized by the use of small dots of color
Question
Why are engravings important in spreading an artist reputation?
Question
How are the first skyscrapers designed and ornamented?
Question
How do the works of Mary Cassatt and Berthe Morisot compare to their male colleagues in Impressionism?
Question
Why did the Impressionist painters focus on scenes of leisure and landscapes?
Question
Art Nouveau artists and architects drew inspiration from _____________.

A) history painting
B) historic battles
C) the subconscious mind
D) nature
Question
Monet was fascinated with the subject of _______________ because of the way light played across its surface.

A) Rouen Cathedral
B) The Crystal Palace
C) Mont Sainte-Victoire
D) wooded landscape
Question
Who was William Morris?
Question
How did Manet break with conventions in his paintings?
Question
How is Central Park organized?
Question
What is repoussoir and how did Cézanne use it?
Question
Probably begun in the last year of his life Cézanne's The Large Bathers returned to ____________.

A) social issues
B) academic convention
C) decorative art nouveau line
D) pointillism
Question
Who was Camille Claudel?
Question
Garnier revived the __________ style in The Opéra , that earlier period of French greatness.

A) Gothic
B) Byzantine
C) Baroque
D) Oriental
Question
What is Art Nouveau?
Question
Known as synthetism, Gauguin's style involved brilliantly colored flat shapes, anti-naturalist color and _____________.

A) gold leaf
B) one point perspective
C) bold outlines
D) shading
Question
Important to the works of Seurat _________ observed that adjacent objects cast reflections on their neighbors and create the effect of their complementary color.

A) Michel-Eugène Chevreul
B) Edmund Burke
C) Charles Baudelaire
D) Cornelius Vanderbilt
Question
How is early photography related to Realism?
Question
What is Japonisme?
Question
In what ways was Henry Ossawa Tanner unlike his contemporaries in the Paris art world?
Question
What is Symbolism?
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Deck 31: Mid-to Late Nineteenth-century Art in Europe and the United States
1
A common theme among Symbolist artists was ____________.

A) Egyptian culture
B) irrational fears and desires
C) the idealized landscape
D) primitive cultures
B
2
What device had artists used since the late Renaissance to project images for reproduction?

A) the camera obscura
B) the daguerreotype
C) negatives
D) lithographs
A
3
In order to emphasize the abstract nature of his paintings, Whistler often chose titles that were more commonly used in ________.

A) psychology
B) music
C) poetry
D) mathematics
B
4
Winslow Homer employed an unadorned realism in depicting the heroic struggles of ____________.

A) African-Americans
B) the working poor
C) soldiers in the Civil War
D) young male athletes
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
__________ artists were committed to painting the modern world honestly.

A) Art Nouveau
B) Symbolist
C) Realist
D) Romantic
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Rossetti was one of the leaders of the __________ Brotherhood.

A) Romantic
B) Pre-Raphaelite
C) Impressionist
D) Symbolist
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Nineteenth-century Russian artists shared the __________ interest in presenting unflinching looks at grim reality.

A) Realist
B) Symbolist
C) Art Nouveau
D) Impressionist
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
The Post-Impressionist artists discussed in the text found inspiration from all of the following sources EXCEPT ________.

A) non-western cultures
B) folk art
C) classical art
D) medieval art
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
What painting characteristic of the juste-milieu style of art so captivated Napoleon III that he purchased it for his private collection?

A) Manet's Olympia
B) Cabanel's The Birth of Venus
C) Rude's The Dance
D) Whistler's Nocturne in Black and Gold
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
The influence of Japonisme can best be seen in the paintings of which artist?

A) Courbet
B) Moreau
C) Rossetti
D) Van Gogh
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Garnering criticism from academicians, Carpeaux's The Dance did not possess the smooth and generalized features of _______________.

A) Neoclassicism
B) juste-milieu
C) Impressionism
D) Orientalism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Courbet's A Burial at Ornans was criticized at the Salon for its disrespect of _________________.

A) his father's death
B) the rules of academic composition
C) his allegiance to the Catholic Church
D) the death of the Academy
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
__________ and his compatriots designed furniture, stained glass, tiles, wallpaper, and fabrics.

A) Eakins
B) Homer
C) Whistler
D) Morris
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Which artist is known for producing portraits of some of Britain's leading intellectuals?

A) Timothy O'Sullivan
B) Henry Fox Talbot
C) Julia Margaret Cameron
D) James Abbott McNeill Whistler
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Van Gogh's insistence on his emotional state over fidelity to nature contributed to the development of which subsequent movement in modern art?

A) Symbolism
B) Japonisme
C) Expressionism
D) Art Nouveau
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
__________ was regarded as one of the most uncompromising American Realists of the era.

A) Eakins
B) Ingres
C) Repin
D) Gross
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
What significant change occurred in how art was conceptualized and created?

A) Political activism began to play a significant role.
B) Some artists retreated into their own imagination.
C) There was a response among artists to photography.
D) All of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Although it still stands today, the __________ was intended to be a temporary structure erected for the 1889 Universal Exposition.

A) Crystal Palace
B) Paris Opéra
C) Statue of Liberty
D) Eiffel Tower
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
During the nineteenth century, who were major patrons of the arts?

A) monarchs
B) workers
C) church officials
D) industrialists and entrepreneurs
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
William Morris's reaction against the mass-production of furniture and other functional objects was rooted in his ____________.

A) desire for his own wealth
B) socialist concerns for industrial workers
C) idea that art was only for the elite
D) religious beliefs
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
The group of artists called the Société Anonyme des Artistes Peintures, Sculptors, Graveurs, etc. is particularly significant for its role in _____________.

A) promoting the work of women artists as equal to that of their male colleagues
B) the rise of independent exhibitions and gallery system to promote a diverse range of art
C) emphasizing the importance of art to represent the fleeting effects of light and color
D) unifying the avant-garde artists in France
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Manet's Olympia was based on a(n) __________ Renaissance source.

A) Netherlandish
B) German
C) Spanish
D) Italian
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
What common denominator unifies the artists considered Post-Impressionists?

A) They lived in France.
B) Impressionism served as a springboard for their experimentation.
C) They rejected Classical ideas and form.
D) Their work is characterized by heavily built-up areas of paint called impasto.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
What impact did the suppression of the Paris Commune have on art after 1871?

A) There was a resurgence in political art.
B) Artists turned to lithography and other printed formats for social critique.
C) Overt political commentary diminished in the art of the avant-garde.
D) Avant-garde artists produce politically charged work anonymously and under pseudonyms.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
What about Dejeuner sur L'Herbe was particularly shocking?

A) the depiction of the female nude
B) the references to important artworks of the past
C) the "immoral" subject matter
D) all of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Most of the Impressionists painted en plein air, meaning they painted outside the __________.

A) market
B) studio
C) revolution
D) church
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
While most of the Impressionists were born in France, Mary Cassatt was born in __________.

A) America
B) Japan
C) Portugal
D) Ireland
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Which artist, known for depicting idyllic and carefree scenes, summed up the essence of painting by saying, "For me a picture should be a pleasant thing, joyful and pretty-yes pretty!"?

A) Rosa Bonheur
B) Mary Cassatt
C) Edgar Degas
D) Auguste Renoir
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
In contrast to some of the other Impressionist painters, Renoir focused on the __________.

A) marketplace
B) street light
C) racecar
D) figure
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
__________ accused Whistler of "flinging pots of paint in the public's face."

A) Morris
B) Ruskin
C) Homer
D) Eakins
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Napoleon III developed the Salon des Refusés for artists rejected from the official __________.

A) government
B) opéra
C) Salon
D) church
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
What was a disadvantage of a daguerreotype?

A) The image was blurred.
B) The image would fade over time.
C) The image could not easily be reproduced.
D) All of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
__________ was devoted to anarchist philosophies and developed an exhibition for Impressionists apart from the official Salon.

A) Pissaro
B) Manet
C) Eakins
D) Morris
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Although artists in different countries developed their own approach to Realism, what common interest united them?

A) a rejection of Academic standards for art
B) a desire to present an unflinching look at the lives of the working poor
C) a preference for oil painting
D) their political affiliation and activist role in society
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
What common practice of early photographers, which seems problematic today, did not concern nineteenth century viewers?

A) Subjects were required to sit for extremely long exposure times.
B) Developments in photography were commercially motivated.
C) The chemicals used in photography were extremely toxic.
D) Documentary photographs were sometimes staged.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
The artist ____________ was reprimanded by the Ministry of Fine Arts for the sensuality of her figures.

A) Rosa Bonheur
B) Berthe Morisot
C) Camille Claudel
D) Mary Cassatt
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
The earliest photographers asserted the artistic value of their work by ________________.

A) organizing museum exhibitions of their photographs
B) imitating the subjects and styles of painting
C) signing their names to the bottoms of prints
D) seeking patrons who would support their work
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
American-born sculptor Edmonia Lewis employed a ________ style to address modern issues such as slavery.

A) Realist
B) Neoclassical
C) Impressionist
D) Symbolist
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Although associated with the Academy, Gustave Moreau's sensuous treatment of biblical themes served as a precursor to which art movement?

A) Neo-Impressionism
B) Symbolism
C) Impressionism
D) the Pre-Raphaelites
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
How does Charles Garnier's Opéra illustrate the Academic practice of historicism?

A) It was built with Classical materials and engineering techniques.
B) Its design was based on Baroque architectural forms.
C) Its primary function was to entertain the French social elite.
D) It was part of urban planning efforts to redesign the medieval city of Paris.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
In Degas' The Rehearsal on Stage the seeming arbitrary cropping of figures suggests the influence of _____________.

A) synthetism
B) historicism
C) photography
D) medieval stained glass
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
Gauguin's interest in __________ led him to give up his affluent lifestyle in search for the more simple pleasures.

A) Japonisme
B) the "primitive"
C) peasants
D) medieval cathedrals
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
The Belgian artist James Ensor frequently used _______in his terrifying paintings, which combined aspects of Symbolism and Expressionism.

A) weapons
B) femme fatales
C) demons
D) masks
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
What innovation seen in Rodin's The Burghers of Calais signaled his departure from established traditions of sculpture?

A) The figure grouping is placed at eye-level.
B) The figures show emotional anguish and despair.
C) Rodin suggests their pain through physical discomfort.
D) All of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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45
Which artist associated with Realism in the nineteenth century found great success in the Salon system, including receiving France's highest honor of membership in the Legion of Honor?

A) Courbet
B) Manet
C) Bonheur
D) Millet
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46
Cézanne's professed aim of painting was to ______________.

A) evoke a strong emotional reaction from the viewer
B) create an image of pure aesthetic pleasure
C) make of Impressionism something solid and durable
D) capture transitory effects of light and atmosphere
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47
In contrast to the Realists, Impressionist artists focused on scenes of the ______________.

A) religious icons
B) industrial monuments
C) upper middle class at leisure
D) social issues
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48
Antonio Gaudí was the major practitioner of Art Nouveau in Spain, where it was called____________.

A) Divisionism
B) Pointilism
C) Modernismo
D) Symbolism
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49
In what context did the notion of an avant-garde among artists first appear?

A) discussions by bourgeois members of the "café society" in Paris
B) alternative exhibitions of artists who had been rejected by the Salon
C) the writings of Karl Marx
D) in programs of French utopian socialists
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50
Which of the following was NOT part of Impressionist's painting technique?

A) painting en plein air
B) grinding and mixing his own paint
C) working while in a boat
D) rendering changes in light and atmosphere
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51
The reading room at the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris demonstrates the tendency of late nineteenth century architects to ______________.

A) fuse a historicizing approach to form with new technologies
B) reject the use of mass-produced and industrial materials in design
C) explore new architectural forms that could reflect the modern world
D) adhere to the dictum that "form ever follows function"
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52
Reflecting Richard Morris Hunt's architectural training at the École des Beaux-Arts, the ideal American city he designed for the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago was based on the symbolism of __________.

A) the American factory
B) Greek and Roman architecture
C) the skyscraper
D) Gothic cathedrals
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53
Frederick Law Olmstead and Calvert Vaux relied on the English tradition of _______landscaping in designing New York's Central Park.

A) symmetrical
B) picturesque
C) Grand Manner
D) maze
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54
Julia Margaret Cameron was a creative early proponent of portrait __________.

A) lithography
B) photography
C) painting
D) sketches
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55
George Seurat developed a distinctive style of painting that he called ___________.

A) Divisionism
B) Synthetism
C) Orientalism
D) daguerrotype
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56
__________'s famous saying "Form ever follows function" had a significant impact on architectural design in the twentieth century.

A) Victor Horta
B) Charles Garnier
C) Louis Sullivan
D) Antonio Gaudi
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57
In what way was Gustave Courbet's Stonebreakers an explicit political statement?

A) He refused to exhibit it in the Salon.
B) His elevated his lower-class subject to the heroic status afforded history painting.
C) He rejected academic conventions to idealize the subject.
D) He depicted an actual event that spawned violent protests outside the city of Ornans.
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58
Although known best for his lithographed posters, Toulouse-Lautrec's organic forms and hand-drawn letters can be linked most closely to which art movement?

A) Symbolism
B) Arts and Craft Revival
C) Pre-Raphaelites
D) Art Nouveau
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59
The development of structural steel and the ________ were essential to the development of the modern skyscraper.

A) electric elevator
B) pre-cut glass panes
C) ancient techniques of concrete
D) cable car
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60
What was George Seurat's goal in his "Divisionist" paintings?

A) to enliven paintings through the use scientific theories about color and optic function
B) to bring Classical structure to the Impressionists' approach to painting
C) to use color to generate a strong emotional response from the viewer
D) to produce an idiosyncratic style characterized by the use of small dots of color
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61
Why are engravings important in spreading an artist reputation?
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62
How are the first skyscrapers designed and ornamented?
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63
How do the works of Mary Cassatt and Berthe Morisot compare to their male colleagues in Impressionism?
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64
Why did the Impressionist painters focus on scenes of leisure and landscapes?
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65
Art Nouveau artists and architects drew inspiration from _____________.

A) history painting
B) historic battles
C) the subconscious mind
D) nature
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66
Monet was fascinated with the subject of _______________ because of the way light played across its surface.

A) Rouen Cathedral
B) The Crystal Palace
C) Mont Sainte-Victoire
D) wooded landscape
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67
Who was William Morris?
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68
How did Manet break with conventions in his paintings?
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69
How is Central Park organized?
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70
What is repoussoir and how did Cézanne use it?
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71
Probably begun in the last year of his life Cézanne's The Large Bathers returned to ____________.

A) social issues
B) academic convention
C) decorative art nouveau line
D) pointillism
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72
Who was Camille Claudel?
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73
Garnier revived the __________ style in The Opéra , that earlier period of French greatness.

A) Gothic
B) Byzantine
C) Baroque
D) Oriental
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74
What is Art Nouveau?
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75
Known as synthetism, Gauguin's style involved brilliantly colored flat shapes, anti-naturalist color and _____________.

A) gold leaf
B) one point perspective
C) bold outlines
D) shading
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76
Important to the works of Seurat _________ observed that adjacent objects cast reflections on their neighbors and create the effect of their complementary color.

A) Michel-Eugène Chevreul
B) Edmund Burke
C) Charles Baudelaire
D) Cornelius Vanderbilt
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77
How is early photography related to Realism?
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78
What is Japonisme?
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79
In what ways was Henry Ossawa Tanner unlike his contemporaries in the Paris art world?
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80
What is Symbolism?
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