All AP Art History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #11 : Twentieth And Twenty First Century 2 D Art
George Braque’s frequent choice of a monochromatic color palette allows for ________________.
the fragmented nature of the work to be minimized
sharper contrast between dark and light in the work
the viewer to focus on the main image of the work
deeper color saturation throughout the work
the viewer to focus on the main image of the work
Georges Braque intentionally picked a monochromatic palette for his cubist works to highlight the way he deconstructed his images into framents. With a monochromatic palette, the viewer would have to focus on Braque’s lines and geometric shapes, rather than be distracted by blocks of saturated color or sharp contrasts between light and dark elements.
Example Question #12 : Twentieth And Twenty First Century 2 D Art
Mark Rothko's mature work is notable for all of the following recurring features except ___________________.
Monochromaticism
Translucent rectangles of color
Two to four floating shapes against a vertical background
Paint applied in thin washes
A large scale
Monochromaticism
All of these are features of Rothko's work with rectangles except the notion that his works were monochromatic -in fact, the colors he employed varied over the course of his career, beginning as bright contrasting hues and moving toward darker maroons and blacks.
Example Question #1 : Understanding Terminology That Describes Twentieth And Twenty First Century 2 D Art
Screen printing is an artistic method that allows for __________.
transforms the colors on a canvas painting
projects an image onto a canvas to allow for hand copying
transforms the brushstrokes in a painting into different shapes
reproduction of an image on different pieces of art
reproduction of an image on different pieces of art
The technique of screen printing involves taking a stamp, covering it with cotton mesh, and inking the stamp onto a canvas to produce an exact image from the stamp. The technique, first developed in the early twentieth century, allows an artist to reproduce the same image repetitively on different pieces of art. This ability was used by Pop Artists like Andy Warhol to create similar images onto canvases which he then painted in a variety of colors to make similar, yet highly diverse, series of images.
Example Question #2 : Understanding Terminology That Describes Twentieth And Twenty First Century 2 D Art
Surrealism is the style most closely associated with which of the following artists?
Henri Matisse
Amedeo Modigliani
Salvador Dalí
Pablo Picasso
Salvador Dalí
Surrealism was inspired by the work of pioneering psychologists like Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung, and used odd, dreamlike imagery in realistic lines and shapes. Its most famous figure was Salvador Dalí, who was the archetypical surrealist. Dali's painting often featured familiar images juxtaposed with strange objects in barren and off-putting landscapes.
Example Question #1 : Understanding Terminology That Describes Twentieth And Twenty First Century 2 D Art
The American painter Grant Wood is most closely associated with the artistic movement known as __________.
pop art
neo-classicalism
abstract expressionism
regionalism
regionalism
Grant Wood lived almost his entire life in the state of Iowa, teaching at schools and supporting organizations in the state. His painting reflected this attachment to his native region, and were articulated by Wood, along with Thomas Hart Benton, into an artistic style known as "regionalism." Wood's most famous work "American Gothic," featuring a farming couple in an honest, empathetic, yet slightly off perspective, is emblematic of the style.
Example Question #351 : Ap Art History
Each of these paintings are deconstructions of __________.
still lifes
portraits
panoramas
landscapes
portraits
Cubism, the style of art both these paintings fall under, sought to reimagine and redefine art by exploring geometric shapes and mathematical concepts. In order to reimagine the very concept of painting, cubists approached traditional styles of art in new ways. Each of these paintings is a portrait, deconstructed. The painting on the left is of a poet, (Le Poéte) by Pablo Picasso. The painting on the right is a portrait of Picasso by Juan Gris.
Figure 1: Le Poéte by Pablo Picasso (1911)
Figure 2: Portrait of Pablo Picasso by Juan Gris (1912)
Example Question #281 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
Color in photographs is primarily determined by mixing the three base colors of __________.
red, blue, and green
red, white, and black
red, blue, and yellow
black, green, and blue
red, blue, and green
A color photographic negative is still black and white, and the color is only brought to the photograph in the development process. Layers of red, green, and blue all filter into particular shades of gray to determine color in traditional color photography. Thus, a photographer can imbue the photo in slightly different ways by developing a photograph in a particular manner.
Example Question #282 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
"Photorealism" is a term most associated with which of the following artists?
Cindy Sherman
Chuck Close
Robert Rauschenburg
Andy Warhol
Chuck Close
Chuck Close's painting method begins with photographs, typically portraits, which he then copies onto huge, wall-size canvases. Close's intial works in the late 1960s and 1970s were extremely realistic, looking like photographs from across a room. As Close kept changing his method, he still worked from photographs, but would add more abstract painting methods to produce his images.
Example Question #283 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
"Drip painting" is the approach to painting in which __________.
the paint is applied so thickly as to give a three-dimensional effect
a glossy finish is applied at the end of the painting to give the work a wet look
paint is allowed to fall on the canvas from a vertical position
large blocks of color are painted across the canvas
paint is allowed to fall on the canvas from a vertical position
Drip painting is most closely associated with the twentieth-century American painter Jackson Pollock, whose signature works involved Pollock splattering, splashing, and slowly dripping paint directly onto canvasses that were laid on the ground. The technique was used almost contemporaneously by the artist Janet Sobel, and has been consistently used by a small cadre of artists from the 1950s to the present.
Example Question #284 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
The "Zone System," formalized by photographer Ansel Adams in the early twentieth century, established __________.
the principles for developing film to achieve optimal light and focus in a photograph
the proper method for framing a photograph before taking the image
the theory for the use of photography instead of painting
the formulation for use in balancing the color in a color photograph
the principles for developing film to achieve optimal light and focus in a photograph
Ansel Adams is well known for two related things: his sweeping black and white photographs of the American West and his many books and classes teaching photography. Most significant in relation to the latter is his development of the "Zone System." The Zone System set down specific parameters to achieve the optimal light, focus, and composition in the development of the film.
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