Library/PT 146/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Many historians say important art was made by rich or ruling people and reflects their ideas. The author explains two ways this happens: elites either hire famous artists to make showy things, or they commission art that directly mirrors their beliefs and way of life. Critics prefer the second kind because it lets them interpret art as expressing elite values, but that only works if elites really shared clear beliefs and artists didn’t secretly change the message. Also, since elites sometimes paid for art they publicly disliked, critics sometimes argue—in a Freudian-like way—that those works still secretly reveal elite ideals.

Logic Breakdown

Approach: This is an EXCEPT (which is NOT mentioned) question — identify the complications the passage explicitly raises that undermine sociohistorical interpretations and pick the choice not discussed. Supporting quotes: "...we can eliminate the possibility that artists subverted the ideals of the patron for their own reasons."; "...engaged by a rich patron with eccentric tastes, for example."; "The taste of the aristocracy and the upper middle class has not always been apt to produce an art that endures."; "...was paid for by the establishment unwillingly and with misgivings."

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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10.

The passage raises all of the following as complications for the sociohistorical interpretation of art EXCEPT:

Correct Answer
D
D is correct because the passage never mentions patrons who bought artwork solely to resell for a profit. The author lists complications having to do with artists' independence or subversion ("...we can eliminate the possibility that artists subverted the ideals of the patron for their own reasons."), patrons with eccentric tastes ("...engaged by a rich patron with eccentric tastes, for example."), patrons whose tastes do not produce enduring art ("The taste of the aristocracy and the upper middle class has not always been apt to produce an art that endures."), and patrons who unwillingly commissioned art that conflicted with their values ("...was paid for by the establishment unwillingly and with misgivings."). Nowhere does the passage raise resale-for-profit as a complication, so D is the only choice not raised.
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