Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Mexican muralism began after the 1920 Revolution with government support, but the artists themselves defined it: they wanted large public paintings that showed Mexico’s people, history, myths, and everyday life and that commented on current events. While many murals had national or populist themes, they were also artistically new—each main artist (Rivera, Orozco, Siqueiros) developed a different style. Painting on huge walls forced them to use big, sweeping brushstrokes and to make images that look good from many viewpoints.
Logic Breakdown
Locate the paragraph's main thesis sentence and match it to the answer that expresses that thesis: the paragraph rejects reducing muralism to official/government art and emphasizes artistic innovations beyond politics.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage8.The primary purpose of the second paragraph is to
Correct Answer
E
The paragraph directly states its thesis: "But while many muralist works express populist or nationalist ideas, it is a mistake to attempt to reduce Mexican mural painting to formulaic, official government art." It goes on to say that "It is more than merely the result of the changes in political and social awareness that the Mexican Revolution represented; it also reflected important innovations in the art world." These sentences show the paragraph's primary purpose is to argue that muralism cannot be understood by focusing solely on its political dimension, which is what choice E says.
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