All CLEP Humanities Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #31 : Visual Arts
The above photo is taken from what conflict?
The Napoleonic Wars
The American Civil War
The Mexican American War
The Franco-Prussian War
The Spanish American War
The American Civil War
During the American Civil War, the medium of photography was still relatively new, having only been invented a few decades before the outbreak of war in 1861. The photographer Matthew Brady was the pioneering figure in developing photography throughout the war. By capturing war in the realistic medium of photography, Brady both helped people see war in a different manner and appreciate the possibilities of photography.
Example Question #32 : Visual Arts
Who was the French artist who spent the last years of his life living in Polynesia and painting its inhabitants?
Paul Cézanne
Henri Matisse
Édouard Manet
Paul Gauguin
Vincent van Gogh
Paul Gauguin
Paul Gauguin was an important Post-Impressionist whose early work experimented with color and symbolism, but Gauguin's work took on a new form after visiting Tahiti in the 1880s. Gauguin began capturing the culture of Polynesia and started using symbols of Polynesia and images of Polynesians themselves in his art. In the 1890s, he permanently moved to the island of Punaauia in French Polynesia, and painted more and more symbolic paintings that played with color and structure.
Example Question #78 : Nineteenth Century 2 D Art
The above painting is representative of what artistic movement?
Surrealism
Abstract Expressionism
Cubism
Impressionism
Pointilism
Impressionism
This painting, Edgar Degas' "The Dance Lesson," was painted in 1879 and is a classic representation of impressionism. With its visible and broad brush strokes and its detached point of view, this painting features the hallmarks of impressionism, a painting style developed in France in the late nineteenth century. Degas preferred to call his artistic style "realism," because he believed his method of painting captured the realistic emotion of a scene, if not an exact representation of it.
Example Question #33 : Visual Arts
All of the following painters were Impressionists except __________.
Édouard Manet
Claude Monet
Paul Cézanne
Pierre-August Renoir
Henri Matisse
Henri Matisse
Impressionism was a significant artistic movement developed in France during the late nineteenth century that utilized visible brushstrokes, representations of natural light, and everyday scenes. Challenging traditional ideas of art, the movement was initially derided by critics, but proved hugely influential. Its leading artists included Éduouard Manet, Claude Monet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, and Paul Cézanne. Henri Matisse was a full generation younger than the impressionists, and was highly influenced by them, but helped develop modern art in the early twentieth century.
Example Question #201 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
The above work of art is an example of the artistic movement known as __________.
Neoclassicism
Expressionism
Realism
Post-Impressionism
Cubism
Post-Impressionism
This painting, an 1899 self-portrait by Vincent van Gogh, stands firmly in the tradition of post-impressionism. Post-impressionists took many of the elements of the Impressionists of a generation earlier, including visible brushstrokes, emotional concerns, and everyday scenes, and pushed them further. As seen in this work, the paint is extremely thick and textured, with bright, almost unrealistic colors sharpening the image.
Example Question #201 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
The Hudson River School was a group of artists known for making what kind of paintings?
Still lifes
Religious icons
History paintings
Portraits
Landscapes
Landscapes
The Hudson River School was a group of painters in the early part of the nineteenth century who gathered in communities along the Hudson River in New York. These artists were heavily inspired by the romantic movement coming out of Europe and painted dramatic landscapes. Prominent members of the Hudson River School were Thomas Cole, Asher Durand, and Frederic Edwin Church.
Example Question #202 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
The French painter who was the official painter for the rule of the Emperor Napoleon I was __________.
Antoine-François Callet
Théodore Géricault
Alexander Kucharsky
Jacques-Louis David
Eugène Delacroix
Jacques-Louis David
Jacques-Louis David first made a name for himself as a historical painter in the 1780s, but his republican sympathies meant he was allied with French revolutionaries. This benefitted him most by allowing him to become the Emperor Napoleon's official court painter. Famous for his portraits of Napoleon, and particularly his large Coronation of Napoleon from 1806, David's style featured bold expressions, bright colors, and dramatic poses.
Example Question #21 : 2 D Visual Art
The above photography was made by which notable American artist?
Alfred Stieglitz
Ansel Adams
Matthew Brady
Willard Van Dyke
William Page
Matthew Brady
The work of Matthew Brady during the American Civil War pioneered many notable aspects of photography, which was still a new medium and had mostly been devoted to portraiture. Brady's willingness to document the Civil War by going to battlefields reframed the possibilities for photography, notably allowing for the development of photojournalism.
Example Question #271 : Ap Art History
Who was the painter who chronicled the wildlife, particularly birds, of nineteenth century America?
John Singer Sargent
Frederic Remington
James Carroll Beckwith
Gilbert Stuart
John James Audubon
John James Audubon
John James Audubon was a Frenchman who came to America in 1803 to avoid the Napoleonic Wars. He made a name for himself in the early nineteenth century as a painter of wildlife and landscapes of the then vast American frontier. His The Birds of America, published in sections between 1827 and 1838, not only was a remarkable work of art by an American artist, but helped ornithology immensely in understanding avian wildlife in America.
Example Question #204 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
The artistic movement known as Impressionism began in which country?
England
Spain
Italy
France
The Netherlands
France
Impressionism grew popular in the nineteenth century as a reaction to France's main artistic competition, the Salon de Paris. The Salon's judges valued grand themes, realistic portrayals, and fine brushwork, whereas the Impressionists focused on everyday scenes, emotional depictions, and visible, thick brushstrokes. Some of the major impressionists include Paul Cézanne, Édouard Manet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, and Claude Monet.
Certified Tutor
Certified Tutor
All CLEP Humanities Resources
