Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
The author says Julia Margaret Cameron’s staged photos of people dressed as biblical or literary characters are charming not because they convincingly imitate great paintings, but because their flaws reveal the real people underneath—the housemaids, relatives, and children struggling to sit still. In photos we can’t forget the sitter is both an actor and a person, so the truth of the awkward sitting comes through more than the story being acted, which gives the pictures life; if they were seamless illustrations, they’d be dull curiosities. Cameron’s best work mixes this homemade, amateur feel with real artistry—like in The Passing of Arthur, where obvious props still create a magical scene, more like the delight of good amateur theater than a failed copy of high art.
Logic Breakdown
The author describes Cameron’s staged photographs as revealing the real conditions of the sitting: sitters’ faces blur if they move, they are “trying desperately hard to sit still,” and posing is an “ordeal.” This supports an inference about lengthy exposures/time needed in early photography.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage13.The passage provides the most support for inferring that in Cameron's era
Correct Answer
E
The passage indicates that sitters had to remain motionless and that movement caused blur: “faces are blurred because they moved,” people are “trying desperately hard to sit still,” and “The way each sitter endures his or her ordeal.” These details support the inference that taking a picture required substantial time in Cameron’s era, necessitating stillness to avoid blur.
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