Docsity
Docsity

Prepare for your exams
Prepare for your exams

Study with the several resources on Docsity


Earn points to download
Earn points to download

Earn points by helping other students or get them with a premium plan


Guidelines and tips
Guidelines and tips

Quiz 2 with Questions - Art Appreciation - Fall 2000 | ARTS 2001, Quizzes of Art

Material Type: Quiz; Class: Art Appreciation; Subject: Arts; University: Southern Polytechnic State University; Term: Fall 2000;

Typology: Quizzes

Pre 2010

Uploaded on 08/03/2009

koofers-user-teg
koofers-user-teg 🇺🇸

10 documents

1 / 5

Toggle sidebar

This page cannot be seen from the preview

Don't miss anything!

bg1
ARTS 2001. Quiz #2. Chs. 18-22. 12/04/00. P. 1
Quiz #2 Chs. 18-22 ARTS 2001-Art Appreciation Fall 2000
Questions on this test are taken from the book A WORLD OF ART, outside readings, PowerPoint presentations, films, and
discussions. Future information from class lecture/discussions on these chapters may appear on a later test.
2. In Romanticism, regardless of subject matter, paintings revealed the artist’s_________.
a. Individuality b. All of these c. political opinion d. Religious orientation
3. What is the Baroque style noted for?
a. form and composition b. Theatricality and drama c. Sensuality and emotion d. All of these
4. The advent of new secular subject matter during the Baroque period, and in particular that of landscape painting, represents
what?
a. the church is no longer the major patron of art
b. the belief that the spiritual is no longer confined exclusively to the church
c. a shift in Western thinking
d. all of these
5. Which one doesn’t belong?
a. b. c. d.
a. “Dual Hamburgers” by Claes Oldenburg b. “200 Campbells Soup Cans” by Andy Warhol
c. “Gun” by Andy Warhol d. “Spiral Jetty” by Robert Smithson
6. The Post-Impressionists were united by__________.
a. The time period in which they painted c. their basic painting style
b. Their subject matter d. A nihilistic viewpoint
1. American Gothic” by Grant Wood is representative
of what group/style?
a. conceptual art
b. Pop art
c. Photo-Realism
d. American Regionalism
e. Op art
pf3
pf4
pf5

Partial preview of the text

Download Quiz 2 with Questions - Art Appreciation - Fall 2000 | ARTS 2001 and more Quizzes Art in PDF only on Docsity!

Quiz #2 Chs. 18-22 ARTS 2001-Art Appreciation Fall 2000

Questions on this test are taken from the book A WORLD OF ART, outside readings, PowerPoint presentations, films, and discussions. Future information from class lecture/discussions on these chapters may appear on a later test.

  1. In Romanticism, regardless of subject matter, paintings revealed the artist’s_________. a. Individuality b. All of these c. political opinion d. Religious orientation
  2. What is the Baroque style noted for? a. form and composition b. Theatricality and drama c. Sensuality and emotion d. All of these
  3. The advent of new secular subject matter during the Baroque period, and in particular that of landscape painting, represents what? a. the church is no longer the major patron of art b. the belief that the spiritual is no longer confined exclusively to the church c. a shift in Western thinking d. all of these
  4. Which one doesn’t belong?

a. b. c. d.

a. “Dual Hamburgers” by Claes Oldenburg b. “200 Campbells Soup Cans” by Andy Warhol c. “Gun” by Andy Warhol d. “Spiral Jetty” by Robert Smithson

  1. The Post-Impressionists were united by__________. a. The time period in which they painted c. their basic painting style b. Their subject matter d. A nihilistic viewpoint
    1. American Gothic” by Grant Wood is representative of what group/style? a. conceptual art b. Pop art c. Photo-Realism d. American Regionalism e. Op art
  1. Put these in order from earliest to latest. Picasso & Cubism; Futurism; Minimalism; Post Impressionism; Realism

a. Realism; Post- Impressionism; Picasso & Cubism; Futurism; Minimalism b. Post-Impressionism; Futurism; Picasso & Cubism; Minimalism; Realism c. Realism; Picasso & Cubism; Post-Impressionism; Minimalism; Futurism d. Realism; Picasso & Cubism; Post- Impressionism; Futurism; Minimalism

  1. The 20th^ century painting movement that Henri Matisse is most often associated with is___________. a. Fauvism b. Dada c. Cubism d. Postmodernism
  2. The artist Andre Breton issued a manifesto that described the point of “resolution between these two states, dream and reality.” What was this movement? a. Decisionism b. Automatism c. Surrealism d. Suprematism

Leonardo da Vinci’s “Last Supper” Tintoretto’s “Last Supper”

  1. Which is true about the above paintings? a. Leonardo’s, a Renaissance painting, contrasts sharply with Tintoretto’s, a typical Baroque painting. b. Leonardo’s “Last Supper,” with formal geometric composition & natural lighting, contrasts sharply with the highly unusual and emotional Romantic painting by Tintoretto. c. The main difference between the 2 “Last Suppers” is that Leonardo’s is more secular than Tintoretto’s. d. Leonardo da Vinci’s “Last Supper” is a typical High Renaissance work, while Tintoretto’s, a Late Renaissance painting, displays characteristics of a new style, the Baroque.
  2. Umberto Boccioni and the other Futurists were interested in many new aspects of the 20th^ century including: a. The fast moving pace of civilization b. feminism c. Absolute rule d. Acrylic paintings
  3. Put these in order from earliest to latest. Romantic Realism; Idealistic Realism; Dramatic Realism; “Real” Realism a. Idealistic Realism; Romantic Realism; Dramatic Realism; “Real” Realism b. Idealistic Realism; Dramatic Realism; Romantic Realism; “Real” Realism c. Dramatic Realism; Idealistic Realism; Romantic Realism; “Real” Realism e. “Real” Realism; Romantic Realism; Idealistic Realism; Dramatic Realism
  4. Two artists who worked together to promote the style called Cubism were: a. Matisse & Picasso b. Braque & Picasso c. Matisse & Braque d. Cezanne & Matisse
  1. Which isn’t true of Minimalism? a. “What you see is what you get.” c. Reaction against Action Painting b. addressed notions of space d. Eclectic combinations of lots of earlier styles
  2. Who, because he freed art from subject matter and emphasized the act of painting over content, is known as the Father of Modern Art? a. Jackson Pollock b. Edouard Manet c. Claude Monet d. Vincent Van Gogh
  3. Is this statement: a. True or b. False Neo-classicism focused on moral and patriotic virtues of the Greek & Roman heroes.
  4. Choose the most correct ending to this sentence. “Where the art of the High Renaissance sought to create a feeling of balance and proportion,… a. “quite the opposite was the goal of Mannerist art.” b. “Mannerist art continued that tradition of balance and control.” c. “Mannerism is much less stylized than Renaissance art.” d. “Mannerist paintings lacked individuality.”
  5. Which of these statements about the above painting is true? a. This is an “Action Painting,” a type of abstract expressionism, done by American artist Jackson Pollock. b. This is an example of Optical, or “Op,” art, a style that followed and reacted against Pop art in America. c. This is a tiny detail from one of the Impressionists’ paintings. d. This is a drop cloth used by house painters.

“Swimmin’ the river, 1987---“ by Billy Curmano “Social Mirror” by Mierle Ukeles Laderman

  1. The photos above represent what type of art? a. site-specific art; b. earthworks c. feminist art d. performance art
  1. Which of the following statements is correct? a. The first painting is an example of Pointillism; the second, Impressionism. b. The first painting is on the cover of my textbook , A World of Art, 3rd^ edition, by Henry Sayre. c. The first painting is by Seurat; the second, by Monet. d. All of these statements are true.
  2. The Viet Nam Memorial by Maya Lin in Washington, D.C., is an example of: a. site-specific art b. public art c. earthworks d. all of these
    1. This painting is an example of: a. color field painting b. op art c. pop art d. none of these
    2. This is: a. a picture, a real chair, and words about a chair b. an installation in a museum c. all of these d. an example of “conceptual” art. e. “1 and 3 chairs” by Joseph Kosuth.