Library/PT 140/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

The passage explains how Sam Gilliam, a leading African American painter tied to the Washington Color School, chose Color Field abstraction—simple, bright, nonrepresentational color—over the literal, overtly political art many of his peers made. He felt such direct messages were too limiting and wanted more subtle, experimental ways to show complex experiences. Gilliam poured paint, folded canvases, and, starting around 1965, hung large, loose canvases from walls and ceilings, giving them a sculptural feel. By balancing opposites like chaos and control and creating moods rather than clear slogans, he aimed to convey the deep, hard-to-state emotions of African American life to any viewer.

Logic Breakdown

The passage profiles Sam Gilliam’s turn toward experimental Color Field abstraction, contrasting it with contemporaries’ representational, explicitly political art. The collage artist is cited as a concrete example of the representational, issue-driven work Gilliam reacted against.

Passage Stimulus

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3.

The author mentions a collage artist in the second paragraph primarily to

Correct Answer
D
The collage artist is introduced as an example of the representational, politically explicit art Gilliam opposed: "Gilliam's participation in the Color Field movement was motivated in part by his reaction to the art of his African American contemporaries, much of which was strictly representational and was intended to convey explicit political statements." The author then specifies, "For example, one of his contemporaries worked with collage, assembling disparate bits of images from popular magazines into loosely structured compositions that depicted the period's political issues." The author immediately contrasts Gilliam’s view: "Though such art was quite popular with the general public, Gilliam was impatient with its straightforward, literal approach to representation." These sentences show the collage artist is mentioned to illustrate the kind of art Gilliam was reacting against.
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