Renaissance to Contemporary 2D Art

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AP Art History › Renaissance to Contemporary 2D Art

Questions 1 - 10
1

Cassatt coiffure

The Coiffure, by Mary Cassatt, is related to the artistic movement                                           .

Impressionism

Fauvism

Neo-Classicalism

Surrealism

Explanation

Mary Cassatt was the only American woman to be actively involved as an artist in the late nineteenth century French avant-garde art movements. While this work is not traditionally impressionistic, especially as it is a drypoint print rather than a painting, it shares many similarities in tone and style to the works of the Impressionists Cassatt worked so closely with in France. Most notably, the influence of Japanese art, the everyday subject, and the free lines are hallmarks of Impressionism as an artistic movement.

Image is in the public domain, accessed through Wikipedia Media Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Mary\_Cassatt\_-\_The\_Coiffure\_-\_NGC\_29882.jpg

2

Who was the painter of the odd court painting Las Meninas?

Diego Velazquez

El Greco

Titian

Hans Holbein

Raphael

Explanation

Diego Velazquez was an idiosyncratic painter who became the offical court painter for the Spanish king Philip IV. Velazquez's unique composition style, love of odd subjects, and expressive portrait style found its culmination in Las Meninas, a 1656 painting that shows the daughters of the King with their attendants and the painter in a large room with people coming and going. The painting was so remarkable that Pablo Picasso made a cubist version of it in the twentieth century.

3

Cassatt coiffure

The Coiffure, by Mary Cassatt, is related to the artistic movement                                           .

Impressionism

Fauvism

Neo-Classicalism

Surrealism

Explanation

Mary Cassatt was the only American woman to be actively involved as an artist in the late nineteenth century French avant-garde art movements. While this work is not traditionally impressionistic, especially as it is a drypoint print rather than a painting, it shares many similarities in tone and style to the works of the Impressionists Cassatt worked so closely with in France. Most notably, the influence of Japanese art, the everyday subject, and the free lines are hallmarks of Impressionism as an artistic movement.

Image is in the public domain, accessed through Wikipedia Media Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Mary\_Cassatt\_-\_The\_Coiffure\_-\_NGC\_29882.jpg

4

Cassatt coiffure

The Coiffure, by Mary Cassatt, is related to the artistic movement                                           .

Impressionism

Fauvism

Neo-Classicalism

Surrealism

Explanation

Mary Cassatt was the only American woman to be actively involved as an artist in the late nineteenth century French avant-garde art movements. While this work is not traditionally impressionistic, especially as it is a drypoint print rather than a painting, it shares many similarities in tone and style to the works of the Impressionists Cassatt worked so closely with in France. Most notably, the influence of Japanese art, the everyday subject, and the free lines are hallmarks of Impressionism as an artistic movement.

Image is in the public domain, accessed through Wikipedia Media Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Mary\_Cassatt\_-\_The\_Coiffure\_-\_NGC\_29882.jpg

5

Fauvism in the early 1900's was a movement that                                   .

was so named because the artists were condemned as "wild beasts"

was so named because its artists frequently chose wild animals as their subjects

followed as a natural outgrowth stylistically of Impressionism

concentrated on a renewed use of realistic colors

Explanation

"Fauvism" is so named because the term "fauve," or "wild beast," was attributed to certain artists exhibiting at the 1905 Salon d'Automne. Their lack of realism, especially in the use of nonrepresentational colors, led to severe criticism of their work. Their movement was named after this insulting nickname.

6

Who was the painter of the odd court painting Las Meninas?

Diego Velazquez

El Greco

Titian

Hans Holbein

Raphael

Explanation

Diego Velazquez was an idiosyncratic painter who became the offical court painter for the Spanish king Philip IV. Velazquez's unique composition style, love of odd subjects, and expressive portrait style found its culmination in Las Meninas, a 1656 painting that shows the daughters of the King with their attendants and the painter in a large room with people coming and going. The painting was so remarkable that Pablo Picasso made a cubist version of it in the twentieth century.

7

Who was the painter of the odd court painting Las Meninas?

Diego Velazquez

El Greco

Titian

Hans Holbein

Raphael

Explanation

Diego Velazquez was an idiosyncratic painter who became the offical court painter for the Spanish king Philip IV. Velazquez's unique composition style, love of odd subjects, and expressive portrait style found its culmination in Las Meninas, a 1656 painting that shows the daughters of the King with their attendants and the painter in a large room with people coming and going. The painting was so remarkable that Pablo Picasso made a cubist version of it in the twentieth century.

8

Fauvism in the early 1900's was a movement that                                   .

was so named because the artists were condemned as "wild beasts"

was so named because its artists frequently chose wild animals as their subjects

followed as a natural outgrowth stylistically of Impressionism

concentrated on a renewed use of realistic colors

Explanation

"Fauvism" is so named because the term "fauve," or "wild beast," was attributed to certain artists exhibiting at the 1905 Salon d'Automne. Their lack of realism, especially in the use of nonrepresentational colors, led to severe criticism of their work. Their movement was named after this insulting nickname.

9

Fauvism in the early 1900's was a movement that                                   .

was so named because the artists were condemned as "wild beasts"

was so named because its artists frequently chose wild animals as their subjects

followed as a natural outgrowth stylistically of Impressionism

concentrated on a renewed use of realistic colors

Explanation

"Fauvism" is so named because the term "fauve," or "wild beast," was attributed to certain artists exhibiting at the 1905 Salon d'Automne. Their lack of realism, especially in the use of nonrepresentational colors, led to severe criticism of their work. Their movement was named after this insulting nickname.

10

                     was a time of great prosperity and wealth within the Dutch Republic, now known as Holland or The Netherlands. Paintings from this age display many Baroque qualities, but are generally much simpler and realistic in their imagery. Rembrandt is well known for having been a painter during this time.

The Dutch Golden Age

The Baroque Period

The Dutch Bronze Age

The Dutch Renaissance

The Rococo period

Explanation

A "golden age" typically refers to a time of great prosperity and wealth. The Dutch Golden Age was a time of both great prosperity for the newly independent Dutch Republic, but also a time of great creativity. Although the Dutch Golden Age occurred during the Baroque period and shares many of its characteristics, there are subtle differences, such as the realism and simplicity that marks Dutch paintings. For an example of these features, see The Milkmaid by Johannes Vermeer.

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