Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
The passage says some forgeries can look beautiful and even fool experts (for example, Han van Meegeren’s painting was praised as a Vermeer), but philosopher Alfred Lessing argues that forgeries are still artistically worse because they lack originality and historical importance—original works matter not just for how they look but for creating new ways of seeing and changing art history.
Logic Breakdown
Locate Lessing's thesis: he grants that forgeries can have surface aesthetic merit but argues they are artistically inferior because they lack originality and historical/historical-significance; choose the answer that states that.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage7.Which one of the following most accurately expresses the main point of the passage?
Correct Answer
C
Lessing's main claim is that forged works can be aesthetically fine but are artistically inferior because they lack originality and historical significance. Support from the passage: "A forged work is indeed inferior as art, Lessing argues, but not because of a shortfall in aesthetic qualities strictly defined, that is to say, in the qualities perceptible on the picture's surface." Also: "All art, explains Lessing, involves technique, but not all art involves origination of a new vision, and originality of vision is one of the fundamental qualities by which artistic, as opposed to purely aesthetic, accomplishment is measured." And the conclusion: "Van Meegeren's forgery therefore, for all its aesthetic merits, lacks the historical significance that makes Vermeer's work artistically great." Option C restates this central claim and so is correct.
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