AP World History: Modern › Literature, Art, and Architecture 1750 to 1900
The discovery of the Rosetta Stone led to the translation of which of these ancient languages?
Egyptian
Sumerian
Phoenician
Hebrew
Bantu
The Rosetta Stone was found in the early nineteenth century. It contained both Egyptian hieroglyphics and Greek writing. This allowed Egyptian hieroglyphs to be translated for the first time.
Jean Francois Champollion is notable for ______________.
deciphering the Rosetta Stone and allowing people to understand Egyptian hieroglyphics
uncovering the preserved tomb of King Tutankhamen
organizing a failed rebellion against Napoleon in French conquered Italy
discovering the source of the Nile River
being the first man to circumnavigate the Earth
Jean Francois Champollion is notable for deciphering the Rosetta Stone and allowing people to understand Egyptian hieroglyphics for the first time. He achieved this in 1822, following the discovery of the Rosetta stone by French troops, fighting for Napoleon in North Africa.
Which of the following artists was not a practitioner of Romanticism?
Charles Dickens
Charlotte Bronte
J.M.W. Turner
Francisco Goya
Ludwig von Beethoven
Charles Dickens is known as a leader of Realism. He featured realistic characters, harsh story lines, and gritty details of industrial life. Romantics, on the other hand, expressed ideas using strong emotions, passion, and were inspired by nature.
The mid-1800's brought forth a type of painting that attempted to convey a message to the viewer using unreal entities such as the grim reaper to convey death. What was this type of painting called?
Symbolism
Impressionism
Romanticism
Realism
Symbolism used symbols to represent the true message that the painter was trying to convey. This era saw the dawn of many of the common symbols we know now. Such as the grim reaper symbolizing death.
In the late 1800's a type of painting that focused on showing real day to day life of people became popular. What type of painting was this?
Realism
Symbolism
Romanticism
Impressionism
Realism, as the name may suggest, was meant to show real life. These paintings did not show grand landscapes like in romanticism, or show metaphors like symbolism. It was meant to depict real people going about their ordinary daily lives.
Of the 550 artists admitted to the French Royal Painting and Sculpture Academy _____________________.
14 were women
the majority were admitted after the French Revolution
Jacques-Louis David was one of the most famous, but only after the Revolution
they were all French
most lacked talent; they simply had connections with the royal family
Most artists in the French Royal Painting and Sculpture Academy were male, but a small minority were female.
After the French Revolution, the Academy was suspended as it was a project of the Royal family.
Jacques-Louis David was one of the most famous Academy artists, but his fame originated before the Revolution.
Some Academy students, such as the Swedish painter Adolf Wertmuller, were not French.
The Academy was a prestigious institution that was patronized by French Royalty, but nevertheless prided itself on skill and professionalism; it was not a collection of artists lacking talent, but rather talented artists with connections to power.
Which of the following is a famous post-impressionist painter?
Vincent van Gogh
Claude Monet
Édouard Manet
Eugène Delacroix
Vincent van Gogh is arguably the most famous artist of all time. He was a prolific post-impressionist painter. In his time as a painter he produced over pieces of artwork. He also was a leading light of the post-impressionist movement, taking the torch from earlier impressionist masters such as Monet and Manet.
What new form of painting rose to prominence in the 1890's?
Post-Impressionism
Romanticism
Realism
Symbolism
Logically, following impressionism was post-impressionism. This movement was in many ways similar to impressionism, but it deviated in several ways. Thus making is a new form of painting. It rose to prominence due to the works of famous painters such as Vincent van Gogh, and Henri Rousseau.
Romanticism as a visual art movement of the late 1800's, focused on the glory of nature and the natural world. What was this movement in reaction to?
Industrialization
A loss of agrarian society
The over consumption of natural resources
Focus on the technological future
As industrialization progressed throughout the 1800's more and more people began working in factories and with industrial goods. This shift away from the natural world caused a backlash in the form of Romanticism. Romanticism was meant to encourage people to go back to nature and appreciate its beauty. While more people were living in cities, well in excess of half the population was still living in rural, primarily farming, communities.
What was Romanticism as a literary movement?
A movement that advocated for the use common, everyday language in poetry that also used common people and nature as subject matter
A movement that advocated for strict formalism and the use of common people and nature as subject matter
A movement that advocated for the use of common, everyday language in poetry that also used court matters and aristocrats as subject matter
None of these answers
Romanticism as a literary movement was started by William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge with the publication of the Lyrical Ballads in 1798. As a movement Romanticism advocated for the use of common language, and the treatment of all manner of subject (including low-income people and nature) in poetry.