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, an African American painter associated with the Washington Color School, who rejected the explicitly political, representational art common among many African American contemporaries in favor of experimental, nonrepresentational Color Field approaches. It details his motivations, techniques (including draped, unsupported canvases), and his aim to evoke complex emotions through mood rather than direct representation. For an EXCEPT detail question, verify which options are explicitly stated in the text; the remaining option is not stated.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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5.

The passage says all of the following except:

Correct Answer
E
Not stated. The passage does not generalize about what is "most likely" to inspire artists. It only gives a single, limited example of Gilliam’s own inspiration: "Partially inspired by the sight of neighbors hanging laundry on clotheslines, Gilliam began to drape huge pieces of loose canvas..." This does not claim that everyday images are "most likely" to inspire artists in general, nor does it assert that such images give "great inspiration." Even "These efforts demonstrate a sensitivity to the texture of daily experience" describes Gilliam’s sensitivity, not a general or superlative claim about artists’ inspirations.
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