Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Roy Lichtenstein made paintings that looked like comic-book panels. Though they first seemed like jokes, they were also serious—part of a reaction against a later, overly sentimental kind of abstract art—and aimed to show modern everyday life. By using comic images, simple lines, and bright colors, he mixed playful, childlike nostalgia with genuine feeling, so his work was both parody and real art.
Logic Breakdown
Ask what function the listed themes/objects serve in context: read the sentence(s) immediately before and after the list to see whether the author uses the examples to show what Lichtenstein depicted, to argue parody, to contrast styles, or to indicate feeling.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage10.The author most likely lists some of the themes and objects influencing and appearing in Lichtenstein's paintings (third sentence of the last paragraph ) primarily to
Correct Answer
A
The sentence that follows the list states explicitly that these comic subjects and objects “were reflections of the culture Lichtenstein inhabited,” and the prior sentence says his work displayed “an impulse toward realism, an urge to say that what was missing from contemporary painting was the depiction of contemporary life.” Thus the list is given primarily to show aspects of contemporary life that his paintings depict.
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