Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
James Porter was a painter and historian who first showed that African art shaped art in the Americas. He studied old African-American household objects and found West African design features, then used that evidence to show that later African-American artists inherited those styles and that some famous 19th-century painters were of African background. He published a major book in 1943, kept updating his research and solved a few artist puzzles, and left notes for a larger study on Africa's influence on Western art that scholars still use.
Logic Breakdown
Approach: draw the weakest claim that follows from Porter's proof that Duncanson and Johnston were of African ancestry. Relevant sentences: "The work of Duncanson, a nineteenth-century painter of the Hudson River school, like that of his predecessor in the movement, Joshua Johnston, was commonly thought to have been created by a Euro-American artist." and "Porter proved definitively that both Duncanson and Johnston were of African ancestry." These support the conclusion that some Hudson River school works were created by African-American painters.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage9.Given the information in the passage, Porter's identification of the ancestry of Duncanson and Johnston provides conclusive evidence for which one of the following statements?
Correct Answer
D
D is correct. The passage explicitly identifies Duncanson as "a nineteenth-century painter of the Hudson River school" and states that "Porter proved definitively that both Duncanson and Johnston were of African ancestry." Together these statements establish that at least some works of the Hudson River school were done by African-American painters. This is the direct, minimal inference warranted by the text.
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