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
Find Arnold's characterization of the middle class ('Philistines, obsessed with respectability') and link it to the passage's example that commissioning art 'may reflect great credit on one's taste' — thus patronage served to build reputation.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage14.The passage suggests that Matthew Arnold would be most likely to identify which one of the following as the primary reason why, historically, people in the middle class became patrons of the arts?
Correct Answer
E
Arnold explicitly characterizes the middle class as "Philistines, obsessed with respectability." (Passage: "In his characterization of nineteenth-century English culture, cultural critic Matthew Arnold identified the aristocracy as Barbarians, interested largely in fox hunting and gaming, and the middle class as Philistines, obsessed with respectability.") The passage also gives the example that if one commissions a famous architect to design one's house, "that may reflect great credit on one's taste, even if one finds the house impossible to live in." Together these lines indicate Arnold would say middle-class patronage was motivated chiefly by a desire to establish reputation/respectability, which corresponds to choice E.
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