Library/PT 101/Sec 1/Reading Comp
Go to Platform
Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

A fake is art made to trick people, and whether something is called a fake depends on the maker’s intent and cultural ideas rather than just how it looks. Jones’s book lists different gray areas—imitations by followers, copies for teaching, works made to look old, and commercial replicas—and shows that faking rises when collecting rises: it was common in Rome (to pass things off as Greek), rare in medieval Europe (art was mainly for worship), and revived in the Renaissance (people admired antiquity and celebrated individual artists, as with Michelangelo). The book also notes that in some cultures, like parts of Africa, authenticity is about use: a mask used in ritual is “authentic” while a similar one made to sell is not.

Logic Breakdown

Scan the passage for explicit examples corresponding to each answer choice (categories, cultures, collector preferences, cultural views of authenticity, and artists who inspired imitators); choose the option for which no example appears—passage gives historical/cultural examples but no contemporary artists.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

Unlock Full Passage

24.

The author provides at least one example of each of the following EXCEPT:

Correct Answer
E
The passage supplies examples for the other choices but never names contemporary artists whose works have inspired fakes. Instead it discusses historical periods and figures (imperial Rome, the Italian Renaissance, Michelangelo) and cultural examples (African chi wara masks). Supporting quotes: "These include works by an artist's followers in the style of the master, deliberate archaism, copying for pedagogical purposes, and the production of commercial facsimiles."; "In imperial Rome there was a widespread interest in collecting earlier Greek art, and therefore in faking it."; "A patron of the young Michelangelo prevailed upon the artist to make his sculpture Sleeping Cupid look as though it had been buried in the earth so that \"it will be taken for antique, and you will sell it much better.\""; "Fake? also reminds us that in certain cultures authenticity is a foreign concept. This is true of much African art, where the authenticity of an object is considered by collectors to depend on its function." No passage sentence identifies a contemporary artist whose work has inspired fakes, so E is the correct choice.
Upgrade Your Prep

Ready to go beyond free explanations?

LSAT Perfection is the #1 modern LSAT prep platform, trusted by thousands of students for comprehensive test strategies, advanced drilling, and full analytics on every PrepTest.

Detailed explanations for 59 PrepTests
Advanced drillset builder
Personalized analytics
Built-in Wrong Answer Journal
Explore Perfection Plus for full LSAT prep