a. It was carved by Donatello. | ||
b. It was made in the first half of the fourteenth century. | ||
c. It represents the industry of sculpture. | ||
d. It can be considered an expression of the willingness to elevate the status of the artist. | ||
e. It was made for the bell tower of the cathedral of Florence. |
a. It was made by Duccio during the Proto-Renaissance. | ||
b. Compared with Byzantine art, there is more of an emphasis on human emotion and psychology. | ||
c. The parapet in front of the figures is taken from prototypes gleaned from Byzantine icons. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. It represents a “Madonna Enthroned.” | ||
b. It was painted by Giotto. | ||
c. It was innovative in its use of a gold background. | ||
d. The monumentality of the painted figures was innovative at the time of the painting’s creation. | ||
e. It was innovative in its use of overlapping figures to suggest three-dimensional space. |
a. It is a baptistery. | ||
b. It is a bell tower or “campanile.” | ||
c. It was decorated with reliefs by Pisano. | ||
d. It is in Florence. | ||
e. All of the above |
a. Cimabue and Giotto | ||
b. Giotto and Duccio | ||
c. Giotto and Masaccio | ||
d. Masaccio and Donatello | ||
e. Giotto and Gentile da Fabriano |
a. The modeling of figures and clothes with white highlights in some paintings can be seen as taken from Byzantine prototypes. | ||
b. The representation of folds of cloth rendered through the use of a series of very fine gold lines and the flat gold backgrounds of some paintings can be seen as taken from Byzantine prototypes. | ||
c. The plasticity and monumentality of the figures in some paintings can be seen as taken from Byzantine prototypes. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. Siena | ||
b. Mantua | ||
c. Florence | ||
d. Milan | ||
e. None of the above |
a. The iconography of the Madonna pointing to the child as a way to salvation, or the “Madonna Hodegetria” | ||
b. The starburst-like motifs on the Madonna’s head and shoulder | ||
c. The flatness of the Madonna’s hands | ||
d. The gold background | ||
e. All of the above |
a. Saint Francis became a common figure in the art of that era. | ||
b. The travelling friars contributed to the Byzantine influence in devotional images. | ||
c. The representation of Christ’s physical suffering was avoided in the art of that era. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. Gentile da Fabriano | ||
b. Duccio | ||
c. Ambrogio Lorenzetti | ||
d. Cimabue | ||
e. Pierro della Francesca |
a. The support was made with wood planks. | ||
b. Often, a piece of linen soaked with glue was applied over the panel. | ||
c. An application of gesso served as a ground for the first drawings. | ||
d. Before painting, the panel was often gilded with gold leaf. | ||
e. All of the above |
a. It depicts different episodes of the legend of Saint Francis. | ||
b. The backgrounds to the scenes are devoid of architectural or natural elements. | ||
c. It was painted by Masaccio. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. During the era of the Italian Renaissance, Italy was made up of independent city-states. | ||
b. The Italian Renaissance was characterized by a new focus on the individual and his/her perfectibility. | ||
c. The Italian Renaissance mostly affected rural areas. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. The mendicant friars became important spiritual figures. | ||
b. There was a new focus on a more personal relationship with God. | ||
c. The Papacy lost some of its spiritual dominance. | ||
d. All of the above | ||
e. None of the above |
a. They were mostly based on Byzantine prototypes. | ||
b. They included a move toward greater naturalism, tactile value, plasticity, and volume within the representation of figures or things. | ||
c. They were encouraged in part by the willingness to produce narrative art. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. Paintings in the “International Gothic style” tend not to display much surface detail in the representation of landscapes or costumes. | ||
b. Paintings in the “International Gothic style” tend to create an illusionistic deep space. | ||
c. Paintings in the “International Gothic style” tend to show elegant, rather than sculptural, figures. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. During the thirteenth century, church building by the mendicants had a great impact on the city-scape of Florence. | ||
b. Florence was the site of great demographic and economic expansion in the thirteenth century. | ||
c. During the fourteenth century, a period of peace led to an accelerated pace in building. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. It was painted in the Arena Chapel in Padua in the early fourteenth century. | ||
b. It represents the “Lamentation” of Mary. | ||
c. It is part of a larger cycle of frescos depicting the life of Christ and the life of Mary. | ||
d. It was painted by Giotto. | ||
e. All of the above |
a. Humanists differentiated themselves from certain monastic texts on the lowly and miserable nature of earthly life by emphasizing the beauty and order of nature and man. | ||
b. Humanists valued civic involvement. | ||
c. Humanists rediscovered ancient classical texts. | ||
d. All of the above | ||
e. None of the above |
a. It is an example of late Gothic architecture in Italy. | ||
b. It is located in Florence. | ||
c. It typifies Italian cathedral architecture of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. | ||
d. All of the above | ||
e. None of the above |
a. It was much influenced by the style of Duccio. | ||
b. Overall, it tended to be more realistic in style than Florentine painting. | ||
c. The most characteristic representative of the “International Gothic style” in Siena was Simone Martini. | ||
d. The artists who most characteristically incorporated innovations in the treatment of space in Siena were the Lorenzetti brothers. | ||
e. All of the above |
a. The Franciscans and Dominicans were important mendicant orders. | ||
b. They vowed to poverty. | ||
c. To survive, they depended upon their listeners or followers. | ||
d. They stayed in seclusion from society. | ||
e. Some orders tried to imitate Christ and draw attention to his physical suffering. |
a. It was painted by Cimabue. | ||
b. It represents the death of St. Francis. | ||
c. It was innovative in its treatment of space, because it made use of a normal eye-level in its lower portion. | ||
d. It was one of the first oil on canvas paintings. | ||
e. None of the above |
a. The city-states of Rome and Florence, and the kingdom of Sicily | ||
b. The city-states of Florence, Venice, and Milan; the kingdoms of Naples and Sicily; and the Papal States | ||
c. The city-states of Padua, Genoa, and Florence, and the Papal States | ||
d. The city-states of Rome and Mantua, and the kingdom of Naples | ||
e. None of the above |
a. In the thirteenth century, Florence was the center of a small empire. | ||
b. For most of the fourteenth century, there was a pope in Avignon, France, as well as in Rome. | ||
c. The Black Death killed tens of thousands of people in the fourteenth century. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. From the beginning, in the fourth and fifth centuries, the justification of Christian art had been to make manifest, show that God had been made man (through Jesus Christ), using Classical prototypes compatible with Christian ideals, such as the “Good Shepherd,” or the face of Apollo that could signify divinity. | ||
b. Although Brunelleschi studied the work and engineering of ancient architects to design a dome for the Cathedral of Florence, he repurposed them in a dome that was not Roman in form and that served the function of celebrating Mary. | ||
c. Although Donatello studied ancient nude statuary to create figures that had corporeality, he never sculpted a nude figure. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. It was made by Donatello. | ||
b. It represents David, victorious over Goliath. | ||
c. It was conceived for a niche of the Cathedral of Florence. | ||
d. It was the first free-standing nude sculpted figure since classical antiquity. | ||
e. The figure is depicted in a “contrapposto” position. |
a. It is a fresco by Masaccio. | ||
b. It depicts the “Holy Trinity.” | ||
c. It incorporates figures of contemporary donors. | ||
d. It displays the use of aerial perspective. | ||
e. It incorporates certain elements taken from the material culture of Roman antiquity. |
a. He was influenced by Flemish and Netherlandish artists. | ||
b. He was a Venetian painter. | ||
c. He painted the “Saint Jerome in His Study” above. | ||
d. Structure, geometry, light, and tone as visual elements of art, can be said to have been particularly mastered in the later work of this artist. | ||
e. In his later works, the backgrounds to his scenes were generally devoid of details. |
a. Painters sometimes placed their painted narratives in architectural settings displaying ancient classical features, such as rounded arches. | ||
b. Painters sometimes incorporated classical motifs gleaned from Roman sculptures or cameos into their artworks. | ||
c. The nude free-standing sculpture made its reappearance in “Quattrocento” Italy. | ||
d. Artists developed ways to better represent three-dimensional space on a two-dimensional surface. | ||
e. All of the above |
a. Giotto | ||
b. Masaccio | ||
c. Leonardo da Vinci | ||
d. Fra Filippo Lippi | ||
e. Sandro Boticelli |
a. In the competition guidelines, it was stated that the artist needed to show knowledge of Antiquity. | ||
b. The subject-matter of Ghiberti and Brunelleschi’s submissions was “The Sacrifice of Isaac.” | ||
c. They both used classical Roman prototypes to represent the nude body or torso. | ||
d. The winning Ghiberti relief was the one that departed most from the elegant lines of the Gothic tradition. | ||
e. The winning Ghiberti relief was cast from one single piece of bronze and was much lighter than Brunelleschi's. |
a. Andrea Mantegna | ||
b. Giotto | ||
c. Filippo Brunelleschi | ||
d. Lorenzo Ghiberti | ||
e. Fra Angelico |
a. He was an architect and art theorist. | ||
b. He incorporated Roman temple and triumphal arch motifs into the design of Sant’ Andrea in Mantua. | ||
c. His façade of Basilica of Santa Maria Novella in Florence is treated as a reflection of the interior space it encloses. | ||
d. All of the above | ||
e. None of the above |
a. In a general sense and compared to painting in other regions, it is distinguished by its colors and rendition of light. | ||
b. Because of its links to the east, compared to Florentine painting, Venetian painting held on to its Byzantine heritage longer. | ||
c. Through links with Northern Europe, Venetian painters were introduced to oil painting. | ||
d. Giovanni Bellini was an important Venetian painter in the later fifteenth century. | ||
e. Sandro Boticelli was an important Venetian painter in the later fifteenth century. |
a. It was created for the stone and wood worker’s guild’s niche at Orsanmichele, in Florence. | ||
b. It represents sculptors who became Christian martyrs for refusing to sculpt a Roman deity. | ||
c. The sculpted figures seem weightless, as if to signify their spiritual nature, and they hold the symbol of martyrdom: a palm leaf. | ||
d. A and B | ||
e. B and C |
a. Compared to Florentine painting, it was more medieval in style. | ||
b. It was influenced by the innovations taking place in Florence. | ||
c. The influence of Duccio and Simone Martini can be identified in the 1400s. | ||
d. Many images were made of the Virgin, because she was Siena’s patron saint. | ||
e. Fra Angelico is an important representative of fifteenth-century Sienese art. |
a. Popes were increasingly seen as the promoters of humility and renunciation of “worldly” pursuits. | ||
b. Popes sometimes took part in “worldly” matters and collected ancient art. | ||
c. During the fifteenth century, Rome again became the seat of the papacy. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. When it is used in painting, it depicts space as seen from multiple points of view. | ||
b. In linear perspective, orthogonals merge at a vanishing point. | ||
c. In linear perspective, the vanishing point is on the horizon line. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. It was built for Cosimo Medici (Cosimo Vecchio) by Michelozzo. | ||
b. It was partly defensive in nature. | ||
c. It had a rusticated first story, imposing cornice, and interior court. | ||
d. Its private spaces displayed more wealth than its public ones. | ||
e. All of the above |
a. He represents the full expression of the “International Gothic style.” | ||
b. He is known as the first painter to effectively use linear perspective to create an illusionistic space on a two-dimensional surface. | ||
c. He was one of the early Renaissance innovators for treatment of space as well as for the arrangement and modeling of figures. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. The general “softness” of the image, for example the soft, delicate and curvilinear lines of the Madonna’s veil, show Masaccio’s influence on the artist. | ||
b. It was painted by Fra Fillipo Lippi in the mid-fifteenth century. | ||
c. Compared to medieval examples, the painting displays more willingness to reproduce elements of the visible world faithfully. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. It was painted by Bellini. | ||
b. It represents a “Dead Christ.” | ||
c. It makes use of exact mathematical linear perspective to for-shorten the represented body. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. It is founded on the figure of Plato, whose fundamental philosophy rested on the perceived superiority of empirical knowledge. | ||
b. It is founded on the figure of Plato, who believed that true knowledge was to be gleaned from a world of eternal forms rather than from the visible world. | ||
c. It developed into a widely taught and disseminated study program during the fifteenth century. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. It was designed by Alberti. | ||
b. It was larger than any dome that had been constructed previously. | ||
c. Its construction began in the early fifteenth century. | ||
d. It has a herringbone pattern. | ||
e. It is not a completely rounded dome. |
a. All segments of society could participate in government. | ||
b. Florence was a republic in which the nobility had limited power. | ||
c. During the early fifteenth century, Florence accumulated a few victories against the military of other Italian kings and dukes. | ||
d. Florentines tended to see their city as a new, Christian, Rome. | ||
e. Florence became the cradle of the artistic Renaissance. |
a. According to Keith Christiansen, he achieved extraordinary status as an artist, and thus helped change the way by which artistic genius was measured during the Renaissance as well as change the status of the artist itself. | ||
b. He painted a ceiling fresco, “Camera degli Sposi,” that shows an elaborate illusionistic architecture. | ||
c. He painted a “Saint Sebastian,” now conserved in Vienna, in which a martyr is taking place in front of a church. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. It represents a member of the Medici family painted by Fra Fillipo Lippi. | ||
b. It is a manifestation of the reemergence of portrait art and the emphasis on individuality in the Renaissance. | ||
c. It is part of a double portrait in which the portrait of the figure’s wife is facing it. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. For most of the century, Venetian architecture had a distinctive style, in which oriental, Veneto-Byzantine, and Gothic influences cohabitated. | ||
b. Early on, Venetian architects tried to rival the “innovative reemergence” of the classical tradition in the architecture of Florence and build classical structures. | ||
c. There was a strong Gothic influence but only in church construction. | ||
d. Though the Venetians were inspired by the architectural Renaissance taking place in Florence, lack of prosperity in the early fifteenth century made the undertaking of large construction projects dwindle. | ||
e. None of the above |
a. With their position in between east and west, the Italian city-states became the site of trade, mercantilism, exchange of knowledge, and the development of a new wealthy class that could pursue knowledge and fund artistic endeavors. | ||
b. The Renaissance began in Italy, because the printing press and movable type were invented there. | ||
c. Both A and B | ||
d. Both B and C |
a. Because of its greater anatomical realism | ||
b. Because Donatello’s “David” is clothed, while Michelangelo’s “David” is nude | ||
c. Because Michelangelo’s “David” speaks more of Michelangelo than of “David” | ||
d. All of the above | ||
e. None of the above |
a. A focus on human psychology and interrelations in painting. | ||
b. A new interest for irrational space. | ||
c. An interest for the “natural” and naturalism. | ||
d. Careful compositions based on ideal geometric forms. | ||
e. An interest in human anatomy. |
a. It represents the Virgin Mary, John the Baptist, Christ, and an archangel. | ||
b. It was painted by Leonardo da Vinci during the High Renaissance. | ||
c. The garden and the water, as well as being depicted in a way that is very close to nature, could symbolize the Virgin’s purity. | ||
d. The “sfumato” technique used tends to soften the image. | ||
e. Although the background shows a lot of detail, Leonardo did not use atmospheric perspective. |
a. It was painted by Bellini and Titian. | ||
b. It represents a “Feast of the Gods” in which Priapus, the God of virility, was humiliated after trying to lift a nymph’s skirt. | ||
c. Priapus is the figure near the center, wearing the green robe. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. He was the architect who designed the “Tempietto,” pictured above. | ||
b. He wrote a treatise on architecture that contained practical advice for architects. | ||
c. He was a Venetian architect. | ||
d. He built villas that were symmetric in plan. | ||
e. He built churches that featured temple front designs. |
a. It was innovative, because da Vinci was more interested in the perceived physical flaws of the sitter than in her perceived beauty. | ||
b. It was innovative in that the focus was less on the status of the sitter and more on her personality when compared to portraits of the era. | ||
c. It was innovative, because in the early Renaissance, portraits were usually done in profile, and the arms and hands were usually cut off. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. Unlike da Vinci and Raphael, Michelangelo, first and foremost a sculptor, tended to emphasize the musculature of his figures, and more generally, the linear and the sculptural. | ||
b. Raphael was influenced by the style of Leonardo da Vinci; he created very harmonious compositions, but in general, the colors he used were darker than da Vinci’s, and he created hazier, unclear atmospheres than Leonardo da Vinci. | ||
c. Leonardo da Vinci created very harmonious compositions based on geometrical forms in which figures interrelate with one another, but compared to Raphael and Michelangelo, he used much lighter colors and created images with clearer outlines. | ||
d. All of the above | ||
e. None of the above |
a. Palladio | ||
b. Alberti | ||
c. Michelangelo | ||
d. Sansovino | ||
e. Bramante |
a. It shows Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, and Bramante’s traits, in the guise of ancient artists of Greece. | ||
b. According to Timothy Verdon, because it was more important in its original context than the “Disputa del Sacramento,” it was seen first when one entered into the space enclosing the two frescoes. | ||
c. According to Timothy Verdon, “School of Athens” and the “Disputa del Sacramento” both show figures moving toward the viewer of the artworks. | ||
d. It symbolically placed the viewer entering the space enclosing it and the “Disputa del Sacramento” in a grand procession, taking its roots in classical Antiquity and moving toward the kingdom of God. | ||
e. All of the above |
a. The Venetian High Renaissance began with Giorgione’s work. | ||
b. It can be argued that Giorgione, like other Venetian artists, focused more on color, textural effects, and representing the surface of things, and focused less on structure than artists in Central Italy. | ||
c. Among other things, he painted mythological scenes and pastorals. | ||
d. He painted the “Assumption of the Virgin,” pictured above. | ||
e. He was innovative and intuitive in his painting techniques; he liked to use canvas and he did not make detailed preparatory drawings. |
a. Though this treatise retraces the stylistic development of many artists, it generally gives no clue as to each artist as a person and personality. | ||
b. This book was written by Vasari in the sixteenth century. | ||
c. It was written to immortalize and tell the lives of artists and thus is a testimonial to the changing status of the artist and the individual. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. It is an oil painting on canvas by Raphael. | ||
b. It depicts the “Last Supper” with Christ in the center at the vanishing point. | ||
c. In this painting, and as is characteristic of High Renaissance art, the focus on depicting objects and architecture realistically tends to eclipse spiritual symbolism to an afterthought. | ||
d. Judas is the figure to Christ’s left, wearing green. | ||
e. It was painted for the Duke of Milan’s palace. |
a. It was to be part of Pope Julius II’s tomb. | ||
b. His transitional position (he seems about to rise) can be seen as characteristic of Michelangelo’s art. | ||
c. His pronounced musculature can be seen as characteristic of Michelangelo’s style. | ||
d. The complex positioning of Moses can be seen as characteristic of High Renaissance art. | ||
e. All of the above |
a. It was painted for the library of Pope Julius II. | ||
b. The two central figures are Plato and Aristotle. | ||
c. It represents “poetry,” while other frescos in the same room represent other areas of human knowledge (namely theology, jurisprudence, and philosophy). | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both A and C |
a. It was painted for the library of Pope Julius II and represents theology. | ||
b. According to Robert Baldwin, it reasserts the authority of the pope. | ||
c. C. According to Robert Balwin, it justifies Catholic Church dogma and sacraments as divine in origin. | ||
d. According to Robert Baldwin, Raphael deliberately contrasted figures of emotional lay people against the calm and knowledgeable figures of theologians. | ||
e. All of the above |
a. Titian and Veronese, two important forces for sixteenth-century painting in Venice, were known for their striking use of color. | ||
b. Compared to Florentine painting, Venetian painting was known to emphasize the linear aspect of figures and scenes more. | ||
c. Tintoretto, an important force for sixteenth-century art in Venice, was known for his very tight, almost invisible brushstroke. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. He studied Roman and classical architecture and incorporated Roman/classical motifs into Venetian architecture. | ||
b. He was popular in Venice because of the desire to make Venice a new Rome and dominate the Mediterranean. | ||
c. In his “Loggetta” pictured above, stones from faraway places were used to show and suggest wealth. | ||
d. All of the above | ||
e. None of the above |
a. The realization of the painting of the ceiling was a great challenge to Michelangelo, because he considered himself more of a sculptor, he had to be on a scaffolding in an uncomfortable position, and the ceiling is curved. | ||
b. The painting on the ceiling is done in fresco. | ||
c. The ceiling features many biblical scenes separated by illusionistic painted stonework. | ||
d. In the ceiling decoration, he uses figures from classical Antiquity, the Sybills. | ||
e. All of the above. |
a. Pollaiuolo, Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, and other artists performed anatomical dissections and incorporated their discoveries into the representation of the human figure. | ||
b. Some artists printed studies of the human body devoid of skin, or the human skeleton and developed anatomical illustrations. | ||
c. Leonardo da Vinci borrowed from the architect to illustrate the make-up of the human body by representing human forms in elevation, section, plan, and perspectival view. | ||
d. All of the above | ||
e. None of the above |
a. While in Florence, color and its ingenious application were judged of prime importance to render nature life-like, Venetians thought that drawing was the only indispensable facet of an artwork that aimed to render nature well. | ||
b. While in Venice, color and its ingenious application were judged of prime importance to render nature life-like, Florentines thought that drawing was the most important aspect of an artwork that could render nature well. | ||
c. Vasari thought that color was the foundation of art. | ||
d. Artists who thought color was of more fundamental importance usually made more preparatory studies. | ||
e. Artists who thought drawing was of more fundamental experience often painted directly on the canvas, without preparatory studies. |
a. Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, Raphael, and Bramante | ||
b. Masaccio, Fra Angelico, Alberti, and Brunelleschi | ||
c. Giotto, Duccio, and Cimabue. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. Raphael | ||
b. Michelangelo | ||
c. Leonardo da Vinci | ||
d. Titian | ||
e. Veronese |
a. Michelangelo | ||
b. Bramante | ||
c. Palladio | ||
d. Alberti | ||
e. Bernini |
a. One of the most important Roman artists of the sixteenth century. | ||
b. A painter known, among other things, for his use of color, his painterly style, and his poetic landscapes. | ||
c. A painter who painted the “Assumption of the Virgin” above. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. For the protagonists of the Reformation, there was no place for art in the Church. | ||
b. For the protagonists of the Reformation, art in the church could violate one of the ten commandments that forbids making idols of God. | ||
c. For the Counter-Reformation, art in the Church was permitted and valued but was not to be worshipped itself. | ||
d. All of the above | ||
e. None of the above |
a. While Leonardo da Vinci’s “Last Supper” is in the High Renaissance style, Tintoretto’s is Mannerist in style. | ||
b. Tintoretto’s painting is much more nervous and dramatic than Leonardo Da Vinci’s. | ||
c. Tintoretto’s scene is very static when compared to Leonardo da Vinci’s. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. Most of its compositional lines point to places outside of itself, opening it up to the space surrounding it. | ||
b. It is very clear in design. | ||
c. The body of the Virgin and that of Christ are not perceived as separate entities. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. Bramante | ||
b. Palladio | ||
c. Sansovino | ||
d. Brunelleschi | ||
e. Alberti |
a. Titian | ||
b. Pontormo | ||
c. Tintoretto | ||
d. Bronzino | ||
e. Rosso |
a. It was conceived by Giulio Romano. | ||
b. It was built as a pleasure and entertainment villa for the Duke of Mantua. | ||
c. It was built according to the idea that form should follow function. | ||
d. It violates many classical ideals; for example, the four facades that can be seen from the courtyard are all different. | ||
e. Compared to structures of the High Renaissance, this structure is not as unified and symmetric. |
a. It was designed by Giulio Romano. | ||
b. It is part of the Laurentian Library in Florence. | ||
c. It was mostly conceived under a Medici turned pope. | ||
d. It displays many architectural elements, such as the volutes, that confuse us as to their potential supportive function. | ||
e. Its stairway does not feature rails on its sides. |
a. They were promoting Republican ideals. | ||
b. A Medici became pope in the early sixteenth century. | ||
c. They wanted to create a very sophisticated court. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. Thirteenth, High Renaissance | ||
b. Fifteenth, Mannerist | ||
c. Fifteenth, High Renaissance | ||
d. Sixteenth, High Renaissance | ||
e. Sixteenth, Mannerist |
a. Giulio Romano made frescos that display illusionistic architecture. | ||
b. In the so-called “Hall of Giants,” the dominating depiction of dismantled architecture gives one the sense that the Palazzo del Te is falling. | ||
c. Though the exterior facades confuse the viewer by their unconventional use of classical elements, the interior can be considered a “refuge” in its ordered and serene painted compositions. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both C and D |
a. Invasions by foreign entities | ||
b. The bloody “Sack of Rome” | ||
c. Disease | ||
d. All of the above | ||
e. None of the above |
a. It downplays the artist’s skill. | ||
b. It can be seen in the context of an erudite and intellectual game of cross-referencing in which Michangelo’s neighboring “David” and by extension the Republic of Florence are conquered. | ||
c. It makes no reference to classical antiquity. | ||
d. All of the above | ||
e. None of the above |
a. Nanni di Banco | ||
b. Giambologna | ||
c. Donatello | ||
d. Michelangelo | ||
e. Bronzino |
a. The focus on technical virtuosity | ||
b. Naturalism and rational compositions | ||
c. Elegant lines and figures | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. Mannerist architecture creates a sense of confusion as to the function of the architectural devices it uses or displays. | ||
b. Mannerist architects tried to eradicate any reference to classical prototypes in their designs. | ||
c. Bramante’s Tempietto is a Mannerist structure. | ||
d. All of the above | ||
e. None of the above |
a. Raphael’s “The School of Athens” | ||
b. Raphael’s “The Alba Madonna” | ||
c. Michelangelo’s “The Last Judgment” | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. A focus on the sitter’s personality and psychology | ||
b. A focus on the sitter’s status and sophistication | ||
c. Dynamism: the sitter is often captured in motion | ||
d. All of the above | ||
e. None of the above |
a. Elegance | ||
b. Focus on artificiality | ||
c. Appeal to all segments of society | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. He wrote an autobiography in which he gave an exhaustive picture of the historical circumstances of his time, such as the Sack of Rome or the religious battles. | ||
b. He wrote an autobiography in which he detailed the artistic world of his times and depicted his life as full of adventure and great accomplishments. | ||
c. He created the sculpture shown above. | ||
d. Both A and C | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. It is typically mannerist because of its “S” or serpentine compositional lines. | ||
b. It is typically mannerist because of its irrational and unnatural sense of scale and proportion. | ||
c. It is typically mannerist, because Christ’s inevitable death seems to be implied through the figure of the Christ Child. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. It is a bronze cast by Benvenutto Cellini for a Medici duke. | ||
b. The dramatic passed-down story of this sculpture’s casting emphasized the amazing skill of Cellini, who overcame the many difficulties of casting such a complex figure. | ||
c. It represents Perseus, a figure taken from classical mythology. | ||
d. All of the above | ||
e. None of the above |
a. He was influenced by Michelangelo. | ||
b. His bronze sculptures were sometimes used as diplomatic gifts by the Medici. | ||
c. He made exclusively monumental, large-scale sculptures. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |
a. Pontormo | ||
b. Michelangelo | ||
c. Rosso Fiorentino | ||
d. Parmigianino | ||
e. Raphael |
a. Martin Luther | ||
b. John Calvin | ||
c. St. Francis of Assisi | ||
d. Cosimo da Medici | ||
e. John Knox |
a. Because he made sculptures that were not meant to be seen from one point of view, rather his sculptures were intended for a viewer in motion. | ||
b. He made sculptures using the lost-wax technique. | ||
c. Because for the first time since Antiquity, he sculpted monumental nude figures. | ||
d. All of the above | ||
e. None of the above |
a. Mannerist artists were concerned with the issue of style in an artwork. | ||
b. Mannerist artists were concerned with their own subjectivity and originality. | ||
c. The development of mannerism was a way to create interest in a very stable and peaceful society. | ||
d. Both A and B | ||
e. Both B and C |