All CLEP Humanities Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #413 : 2 D Art
Who was the Pop Artist well known for using images of flags and maps of the United States in his work?
Jasper Johns
Diane Arbus
Roy Lichtenstein
Andy Warhol
Jackson Pollack
Jasper Johns
Like fellow Pop Artists Lichtenstein and Warhol, Jasper Johns used familiar symbols and images, but reshaped and transformed them to present them in new ways. Unlike his fellow Pop Artists, who preferred commercial and pop culture symbols, Johns largely used icons of Americana, most notably the American flag and maps of the United States. One of Johns' most well known paintings is of an American flag that is completely in white.
Example Question #414 : 2 D Art
Which twentieth-century artist focused her career largely on self portraits?
Frida Kahlo
Lee Krasner
Diane Arbus
Georgia O'Keefe
Louise Bourgeois
Frida Kahlo
Frida Kahlo was a Mexican artist who took up painting after a horrific bus accident at the age of eighteen in 1925 and her marriage to the European-trained muralist Diego Rivera. Kahlo painted almost entirely self portraits, typically close ups of her own face, to which she added in the background indigenous native imagery, surrealist symbols, and references to her own troubled life. Her stormy marriage to Rivera was well known, and combined with her ill health contributed to a sense of loneliness and alienation in her work.
Example Question #415 : 2 D Art
Nighthawks, a famous painting that shows three customers and a bartender at a well-lit bar late at night from a distance, was made by which artist?
Joseph Stella
Mark Rothko
Georgia O'Keefe
Edward Hopper
Norman Rockwell
Edward Hopper
Nighthawks was painted in 1942 by Edward Hopper, who sought to capture the inherent loneliness and suffocation of the "new" urban society as well as the effects of wartime.
Example Question #341 : Renaissance To Contemporary 2 D Art
The French artist Marcel Duchamp helped to create what artistic movement?
Abstract Expressionism
Cubism
Impressionism
Pop Art
Dada
Dada
Dada was an art movement that grew out of abstract and modernist movements in the early twentieth century. One of the most famous dadaist artists was Marcel Duchamp, a frenchman who began his career in a cubist vein, but then sought to make art that was less "retinal," or simply pleasing to the eye. Duchamp's art work challenged the very notion of what was "art," as in his 1917 "Fountain," a urinal Duchamp placed in the middle of a gallery space and only attributed as "R Mutt."
Example Question #3 : Answering Other Questions About Ancient Grecian And Roman Sculpture
What was the principle material used by sculptors in the Classical period in Greece?
Marble
Brick
Cement
Clay
Iron
Marble
The key feature of ancient Greek sculpture was the monumental size of most of their pieces, as well as the dramatic depiction of heroes and gods. The statues therefore needed to be made of an extremely sturdy and dependable material. Marble proved the most durable and popular material among ancient Greek sculptors not just for the mentioned reasons, but because of its abundance in Greek lands.
Example Question #1 : Identifying Artists, Works, Or Schools Of Nineteenth Century Sculpture
The sculptor Auguste Rodin's style was marked by all of the following EXCEPT __________.
a dark psychological perspective
a realistic depiction of the human body
the use of classical and mythological themes
the capture of movement in a sculpture
making sculptures out of clay that could work as models for bronze casting
the use of classical and mythological themes
Auguste Rodin (1840-1917) was a revolutionary sculptor who helped develop modern art, but he actually saw himself as a traditional craftsman. Rodin would use clay to create bronze molds, and used models. In contrast to his predecessors, Rodin asked models to move so he could capture natural movement and a dark psychological perspective. Rodin also refused to use traditional classical and mythological themes in his work.
Example Question #1 : Identifying Sculptors, Works, And Schools Of Classical Sculpture
The Dying Gaul is a famous Roman piece of art in which medium?
Mural
Fresco
Painting
Mosaic
Sculpture
Sculpture
The Dying Gaul is a statue from the third century BCE and is among the most famous pieces of Roman artwork. The statue is remarkable for its tension and lines in the prone figure, who is slouching into repose from his wounds. Additionally, the face conveys an astonishing amount of pathos and misery, while also showing a perfect form in the figure's body.
Example Question #2 : Identifying Sculptors, Works, And Schools Of Sculpture
Which classical Greek artist is best known for his creation of the statue of Zeus at Olympia and the Athena Parthenos in Athens?
Sophocles
Phidias
Homer
Plutarch
Michelangelo
Phidias
Homer, Sophocles, and Plutarch are Ancient Greek poets and writers. Michelangelo worked in the Renaissance era. Phidias is the only sculptor from the classical Greek era listed.
Example Question #1 : Identifying Architects, Buildings, And Schools Of Modern Architecture
The architectural movement of the early twentieth century that focused on modernism, simplicity, and a complete artistic cohesion among disciplines was __________.
Expressionism
Beaux-Arts
De Stijl
Bauhaus
Socialist Realism
Bauhaus
The "Bauhaus," German for House of Construction, was a school of arts and architecture in the Weimar Period between the two World Wars. The school was so influential that it gave its name to an entire movement, focusing on modern design, efficiency, and a cohesive approach to art between architecture, design, and crafts.
Example Question #1 : Identifying Artists, Works, Or Schools Of Nineteenth Century Architecture
Beaux-Arts architecture in the United States is defined by all of the following features EXCEPT __________.
a hierarchy of spaces
wide use of statuary
a flat roof
use of Baroque motifs
clean lines and shapes
clean lines and shapes
"Beaux-Arts" takes its name from the national art school in France, but describes a separate movement among architects in the United States from roughly 1880 to 1920. The movement was defined by a sweeping neoclassicism that used Baroque motifs, featured a hierarchy of spaces (making grand entryways more important than living areas), added ornate elements like statues and vaultings, and usually employed flat roofs on buildings. The Beaux-Arts style was surpassed by Modernist architecture that valued clean lines and functionality over design details.
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