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
Look for lines that state Gray's design philosophy connecting interior placement to structural design (e.g., that she designed interiors together with permanent structures and thought architecture 'from the inside out'). Choose the answer that restates that principle.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage13.The passage most strongly suggests that which one of the following principles was used by Gray in her work?
Correct Answer
B
The passage explicitly says Gray 'did not believe that one should divorce the structural design of the exterior from the design of the interior' and that she 'designed the interior elements of a house together with the more permanent structures, as an integrated whole.' It also states, 'Architecture for her was like work in lacquer: it could only be achieved from the inside out.' These sentences support answer B — that the nature and placement of interior features can be essential factors in determining a dwelling's overall structural design.
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