Library/PT 111/Sec 2/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Romare Bearden’s paintings do two main things: they show that he developed new, creative painting techniques, and they use those techniques to portray the real variety of African‑American life. He mixed painting and collage to turn ordinary scenes into layered, expressive images. In the 1930s he painted both somber images of hardship in Harlem—using dark colors to suggest despair—and lively scenes of religion, music, and family with equal vividness. Instead of simple stereotypes, his work aims to reveal the full, rich, and varied experience of African‑American communities.

Logic Breakdown

For an EXCEPT question, identify choices that the passage explicitly answers (quote or paraphrase the supporting sentences) and eliminate them; the remaining choice is the one the passage does not address.

Passage Stimulus

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12.

The passage gives information that helps answer all of the following questions EXCEPT:

Correct Answer
A
Choice A is correct because the passage never discusses Bearden's motives for choosing painting as his primary medium. Instead the passage treats what he achieved and how he achieved it. For example, the passage explicitly treats his contributions: 'The paintings of Romare Bearden (1914–1988) represent a double triumph. At the same time that Bearden's work reflects a lifelong commitment to perfecting the innovative painting techniques he pioneered, it also reveals an artist engaged in a search for ways to explore the varieties of African-American experience.' It also describes his Great Depression subjects: 'During the Great Depression of the 1930s, Bearden painted scenes of the hardships of the period; the work was powerful, the scenes grim and brooding. Through his depiction of the unemployed in New York's Harlem...' It specifies techniques: 'By presenting scene, character, and atmosphere using a unique layered and fragmented style that combines elements of painting with elements of collage' and 'His human figures, placed in abstract yet mysteriously familiar urban settings, managed to express the complex social reality lying beyond the borders of the canvas...' And it explains his use of color: 'Another important element of Bearden's compositions was his use of muted colors, such as dark blues and purples, to suggest moods of melancholy or despair... these colors also served as symbols of the psychological effects of debilitating social processes.' Nowhere, however, does the passage address what led Bearden to choose painting as his primary means of artistic expression.
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