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Test: Common Core: 5th Grade English Language Arts
1. | Ancient Paintings Archaeologists working in two recently discovered limestone caves in Sarawak, Malaysia, have found a collection of 51 paintings estimated to be 6,000 to 12,000 years old. The images are unusual in their medium, manner of display, and subject matter. These are not merely wall or ceiling paintings. Stones—some as small as notebooks, some as large as doors—have been chipped and otherwise shaped to form rough canvases for painted individual works. Some of the pieces are stacked, while others are arranged upright in an overlapping pattern so that one can “flip through” the smaller pieces in the collection with relative ease. Hunters, warriors, and hunted animals, the typical cave art subjects, are mostly absent from these works. Instead, domestic scenes are represented, including food preparations, family meals, and recreational activities. Though no tools have been found in the area, the lines’ fineness suggests the use of sophisticated animal-hair brushes. Gypsum, manganese, malachite, and other minerals were painstakingly ground and mixed with binding materials such as vegetable and animal oils to form the paints. One probable reason for the high level of artistry is that the paintings may have been produced in the open air, where the light was good, and then brought into the cave. However, it is the purpose of the paintings that is the most curious. Most interestingly, it may be that the collection represents a sort of family tree. Many paintings appear to feature some of the same people, and it is tempting to think of these works as family portraits. Indeed, one figure, seen as a child with a mark on its forehead—the stone has been chipped away to represent the mark—is shown in other paintings as both a young person and an adult with the same mark. Which piece of text evidence from the passage would best convey that the Malaysian painters were skilled artists? |
These are not simply wall or ceiling paintings.
One probable reason for the high level of artistry is that the paintings may have been produced in the open air, where the light was good, and then brought into the cave.
Most interesting, it may be that the collection represents a sort of family tree.
Hunters, warriors, and hunted animals, the typical subjects of cave art, are largely absent from these works.
