Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Eileen Gray began by making lacquered objects and later designed furniture, rooms, and whole houses, always paying close attention to small or hidden details. She learned a slow, many-layer lacquer technique from Japan and preferred clean straight lines over decorative Art Nouveau shapes. Because lacquered wood must be coated on both sides, folding screens and doors show more of her careful work — one screen even acts like a painting, a piece of furniture, and part of a building at the same time. Gray also made practical, modern furniture to fit specific rooms and designed houses so the interior and exterior and the furniture all work together and serve multiple purposes.
Logic Breakdown
Scan the passage for explicit statements that would directly answer each option; pick the option the passage explicitly addresses—look especially for any comparison between lacquer motifs and Art Nouveau.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage11.Information in the passage most helps to answer which one of the following questions?
Correct Answer
C
The passage directly compares Gray's approach to lacquer with Art Nouveau motifs. Support: In discussing lacquer it says that 'The tradition of lacquer fit well with her artistic sensibilities, as Gray eschewed the flowing, leafy lines of the Art Nouveau movement that had flourished in Paris, preferring the austere beauty of straight lines and simple forms juxtaposed.' This explicit contrast lets us determine whether lacquer motifs were similar to Art Nouveau (they were not).
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