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艺术-Art

楼主:桑田岛  时间:2021-02-15 22:26:58
Watercolor
________ is the technique name commonly used for aquarelle.

Pigment
The color in paint derives from its ________.

Vehicle
Which material is the binding agent of paint?

Medium
Which material provides fluency and pliability to the paint?

Spray Paint
The earliest use of which medium was in prehistoric cave painting?
楼主:桑田岛  时间:2021-02-15 22:26:58
Acrylic
Which medium is a mixture of pigment and a plastic vehicle?

Oil
The slow drying of which medium facilitates the reworking of problem areas?

Gouache
______________ is watercolor mixed with a high concentration of vehicle and an opaque ingredient such as chalk

True
(T/F) The boundaries between drawing and painting is sometimes blurred.

True
(T/F) Pigments are derived from chemicals and minerals found in plant and animal life.

True
(T/F) Fresco paintings are beautiful in color; however, some pigments will not form chemical bonds with the lime ground.

False
oil, acrylic, tempera, and watercolor paint all use a gesso ground.

楼主:桑田岛  时间:2021-02-15 22:26:58
Woodcut is considered what type of printmaking process?
a. relief
b. intaglio
c. planographic
d. engraving
e. etching

a. relief

Engraving is a type of ________ process.
a. relief
b. intaglio
c. planographic
d. matrix
e. burin

b. intaglio


The wood engraving is considered what type of process?
a. etching
b. intaglio
c. laminated
d. burin
e. relief

e. relief

Drypoint printmaking is considered a(n) ________ process.
a. relief
b. intaglio
c. planographic
d. laminated
e. serigraph

b. intaglio

________ is the oldest form of printmaking.
a. Woodcut
b. Engraving
c. Etching
d. Drypoint
e. Serigraphy
a. Woodcut

Which printmaking process uses acid to make the lines?
a. woodcut
b. engraving
c. etching
d. serigraphy
e. wood engraving

c. etching

The printmaking process begins with a design or image made in or on a surface by hitting or pressing with a ________.
a. special ink
b. roller
c. tool
d. matrix
e. paper
c. tool

Printmaking processes are divided into four major categories: relief, intaglio, lithography, and ________.
a. engraving
b. serigraphy
c. drypoint
d. lithography
e. aquatint

b. serigraphy

Prints are generally less ________ than unique works by the same artist.
a. expensive
b. interesting
c. difficult
d. trouble
e. available
a. expensive

The working surface, or ________, of prints varies according to the printmaking technique.
a. matrix
b. flat
c. place
d. paper
e. hatching

a. matrix

The images in printmaking are usually rendered in ________.
a. paint
b. gesso
c. ink
d. watercolor
e. acid
c. ink

Unlike the case with other graphic processes, serigraphy images can be rendered in ________ as well as in ink.
a. tar
b. paint
c. stone
d. acid
e. color

b. paint

After the invention of the ________, woodcut assumed an important role in book illustration.
a. printing press
b. quill
c. copper plate
d. paper
e. burin
a. printing press

Engraving, drypoint, and etching are essentially ________ media.
a. tonal
b. linear
c. painting
d. printed
e. hatched
b. linear

Recently a serigraphic process called ________ silk-screen has been developed which allows the artist to create photographic images on a screen covered with a light-sensitive gel.
a. photo
b. serial
c. etched
d. stenciled
e. transfer
a. photo

The working surface of any printmaking process is called the matrix.
a. True
b. False
a. True

The earliest engravings printed on paper did not appear until the 17th century.
a. True
b. False
b. False

In serigraphy, stencils are used to create the design or image.
a. True
b. False
a. True

Printmaking was not possible before the invention of the printing press.
a. True
b. False
b. False

In etching, the metal plate is covered with a liquid, acid-resisting ground.
a. True
b. False
a. Tru
楼主:桑田岛  时间:2021-02-15 22:26:58
In writing about Un Chien Andalou (Fig. 10.38), Luis Buñuel claimed that his aims were to evoke instinctive reactions of attraction and glorification in the audience.
F
Muybridge
He proved that a galloping horse has all four feet off the ground at once during parts of the gallop.

Personae
Artist Cindy Sherman, a photographer and filmmaker, adopts diverse ________ for her work.

Social
The Grapes of Wrath (Fig. 10.36) is an example of film as ________ commentary.

True
(T/F) Migrant Mother (Fig. 10.12) was a product of Dorothea Lange's camera and the sponsorship of the Farm Security Administration, a U.S. government agency.

False
(T/F) Leni Riefenstahl made what is considered one of the greatest travelogue films of all time, Triumph of the Will (Fig. 10.34).

True
(T/F) While many American actors were embattled in Europe and the Pacific during World War II, Ronald Reagan was making films for the United States that depicted the valor of the Allied soldiers.

True
(T/F) As World War II was drawing to an end in Europe, photographer Margaret Bourke-White arrived at the Nazi concentration camp of Buchenwald in time for its liberation.
楼主:桑田岛  时间:2021-02-15 22:26:58
10


Photography
The word ________ is derived from Greek roots meaning, "to write with light."

Mobile
Film pioneer D. W. Griffith is credited with making the film camera ________.


Spaces
Telephoto lenses magnify faraway objects and tend to collapse the ________ between distant objects that recede from us.

Reversal
There are two basic kinds of color film: color ________ film and color negative film.

Muybridge
________ is credited with performing the first successful experiments in making motion pictures.

Niepce
The daguerreotype was an effort between two French inventors Daguerre and________.

Niépce
Bitumen or asphalt residue was used by________.

Narrative
In ________ editing multiple cameras are used during the progress of the same scene or story location-then shots are selected from various vantage points and projected in sequence.

Autochrome
In 1907, Louis Lumière introduced the ________ process.

Wegman
In which artist's photographs was his dog, Man Ray, a principal subject?

Sherman
Dress designers began to ask ________ to use their haute couture in her photographs.

Flash-Forward
In the ________, editing permits the audience glimpses of the future.
楼主:桑田岛  时间:2021-02-15 22:26:58
Metal
Metal has been used by sculptors for thousands of years. Metals have been cast, extruded, forged, stamped, drilled, filed, and burnished. The process of producing cast bronze sculptures has changed little over the centuries. But in recent years, artists have also assembled direct-metal sculptures by welding, riveting, and soldering. Modern adhesives have also made it possible to glue sections of metal together into three-dimensional constructions.
Different metals have different properties. Bronze, an alloy of copper, has been the most popular casting material because of its surface and color characteristics. Bronze surfaces can be made dull or glossy. Chemical treatments can produce colors ranging from greenish blacks to golden or deep browns. Because of oxidation, bronze and copper surfaces age to form rich green or greenish blue patinas.
Richard Serra has worked with steel, an alloy of iron, to create minimalist sculpture that expresses the physical properties and capabilities of his material. Like the site-specific work at Storm King Mountain ( Fig. 11.18 ), many of his works have been monumental in size and site specific. Serra’s steel surfaces grow more richly textured as time and oxidation work their effects upon them, serving as an apt metaphor for the effect on the visitor’s memory that the experience of the work might h
楼主:桑田岛  时间:2021-02-15 22:26:58
11

A pliable material, such as clay or wax, is shaped into a three-dimensional form in ________.
a. carving
b. modeling
c. casting
d. construction
e. assemblage
b. modeling

A liquid material is poured into a mold in which sculpture process?
a. casting
b. carving
c. construction
d. modeling
e. readymade
a. casting


The lost-wax technique pertains to which sculpture process?
a. carving
b. modeling
c. construction
d. casting
e. readymade
d. casting

Readymades invest an object with a new ________.
a. burnishing
b. idea
c. carved surface
d. patina
e. process
b. idea

With a ________________material is removed from the original, raw mass to define a figure or an image.
a. construction sculpture
b. modeling process
c. additive process
d. assemblage sculpture
e. subtractive process
e. subtractive process

With an ____________ material is added or built up to reach a desired form. These processes are linked to a wide variety of sculptural techniques.
a. additive process
b. subtractive process
c. modeling process
d. carving process
e. readymade sculpture
a. additive process

Michelangelo believed that the ________ process liberated forms that already existed.
a. carving
b. modeling
c. casting
d. assemblage
e. construction
a. carving

The term used in connection with sculptures that actually move is ________.
a. ecological
b. optical
c. mechanical
d. malleable
e. kinetic
e. kinetic

In the casting process__________ has been used most frequently because of its appealing surface and color characteristics.
a. plastic
b. charcoal
c. bronze
d. iron
e. concrete
c. bronze

Dan Flavin's untitled (Fig. 11.13) is a good example of ________ sculpture.
a. kinetic
b. light
c. Styrofoam
d. chocolate
e. bronze
b. light

Sheet metal is a common material in the sculpture technique called ________.
a. carving
b. construction
c. casting
d. modeling
e. mechanical
b. construction

A last step in the casting process after the projections are removed, the surface of the bronze is ______________.
a. gates
b. investiture
c. burnished
d. kiln
e. mold
c. burnished


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Sherrie Levine's Fountains after Duchamp (Fig. 11.8) is a series of urinals in ________.
a. bronze
b. styrofoam
c. porcelain
d. steel
e. marble
a. bronze

George Rickey's Five Open Squares Gyratory turn effortlessly ___________.
a. light
b. tossed stones
c. in light breezes
d. engines
e. heat
c. in light breezes

eorge Segal produced ghostlike replicas of ___________by means of plaster casts.
a. birds
b. human beings
c. appropriated statues
d. found objects
e. toys
b. human beings

Louise Bourgeois' Eyes (Fig. 11.14) is made from ________.
a. marble
b. wood
c. bronze
d. clay
e. found objects
a. marble

Sylvie Fleury uses consumer products such as___________ to make her sculptures.
a. yard
b. trash
c. styrofoam
d. paper
e. wood
c. styrofoam

Land art is site-specific work that is created or marked by an artist within natural surroundings. Examples of land art include
a. desert trenches and drawings
b. bulldozed configurations of earth and rock
c. compositions of ice, twigs, and leaves
d. all of the above
e. a and c only
d. all of the above

One of the most spectacular examples of land art that combines nature and man-made materials is ______________________.
a. The Gates, Central Park
b. Untitled from the "Volcano" series
c. The Lightning Field
d. all of the above
e. a and b only
c. The Lightning Field

In earthworks or land art, large amounts of earth or land are shaped into a sculpture.
a. True
b. False
a. True

Sculptors have always been concerned with the portrayal of movement, but kinetic sculptures actually move.
a. True
b. False
a. True

As bronze and copper sculptures age, the surface is affected by oxidation; the resulting surface alteration is called rust.
a. True
b. False
b. False


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The term ephemeral art is used specifically to describe works that have a temporal immediacy or are built with the recognition that they will disintegrate.
a. True
b. False
a. True

As with all of Christo and Jeanne-Claude's works of environmental art, every aspect of The Gates (Fig. 11.30) project was financed and fought for by the public.
a. True
b. False
b. False

楼主:桑田岛  时间:2021-02-15 22:26:58
12


_______ is very strong and durable and is therefore commonly used for cookware, dinnerware, and much ceramic sculpture.
a. Earthenware
b. Terra-cotta
c. Stoneware
d. Porcelain
e. Bisque
c. Stoneware

___________is hard, nonporous, and usually white or gray in color. It is made from minerals such as feldspar, quartz, and flint in various proportions.
a. Earthenware
b. Terra-cotta
c. Stoneware
d. Porcelain
e. Bisque
d. Porcelain


________ hard-baked red clay that has been fired at higher temperatures is used to create pottery, sculpture, building bricks, tile roofs, and architectural ornamentation with a characteristic reddish-brown hue.
a. Earthenware
b. Terra-cotta
c. Stoneware
d. Porcelain
e. Bisque
b. Terra-cotta

The basic recipe for making glass ________.
a. is extremely complicated
b. could not have been accomplished before the
18th century
c. is quite simple
d. was invented by Charles Glass between 1790
and 1892
e. has its start in the Gothic cathedrals
c. is quite simple

Molten glass can be modeled, pressed, ________, blown, and even spun into threads.
a. thrown on a wheel
b. rolled
c. eaten
d. carved
e. hatched
b. rolled

Fiberglass can be ________.
a. woven
b. used as paint
c. rolled
d. thrown on a wheel
e. quilted
a. woven

An early example of glassware is the Portland Vase (Fig. 12.14), which ________.
a. is in a museum in Oregon
b. is made of glazed ceramic
c. was created by a skilled Greek glassblower
d. was made by a skilled Roman glassblower
e. was created by a Phoenician glassblower
d. was made by a skilled Roman glassblower

Sandwich glass was pressed into molds to take on the appearance of ________.
a. a deli sandwich
b. porcelain
c. carved glass
d. basketry from the Sandwich Islands
e. Venetian glass
c. carved glass

During the second half of the nineteenth century, the name of Louis Comfort Tiffany became synonymous with expert handling of glass as a medium.
a. Maria Martinez
b. Louis Comfort Tiffany
c. Faith Ringgold
d. Kiff Slemmons
e. Dale Chihuly
b. Louis Comfort Tiffany

The strongest and simplest of weaves is the ________.
a. plain weave
b. satin weave
c. twill weave
d. pile weaving
e. reverse weave
a. plain weave

Loops or knots are tied and the ends are cut to make an even surface in a ________.
a. plain weave
b. satin weave
c. twill weave
d. pile weaving
e. reverse weave
d. pile weaving

Warp and woof form broken diagonal patterns in a ________.
a. plain weave
b. satin weave
c. twill weave
d. pile weaving
e. reverse weave
c. twill weave

Applications of wax prevent the dye from coloring sections of the fabric in ________.
a. printing
b. embroidery
c. tie-dyeing
d. weaving
e. batik
e. batik

In ________, a design is applied to cloth with a carved wooden block that has been inked.
a. printing
b. embroidery
c. tie-dyeing
d. batik
e. weaving
a. printing

In ________ the design is made by needlework.
a. printing
b. embroidery
c. tie-dyeing
d. batik
e. weaving
b. embroidery

Sewing or tying folds in the cloth prevents dye from coloring certain sections of the fabric when using ________.
a. printing
b. embroidery
c. tie-dyeing
d. batik
e. weaving
c. tie-dyeing

To achieve hard, durable, and waterproof vessels, clay must be exposed to heat or fire.
a. True
b. False
a. True

Dry glazes cannot be used on clay, but liquid glazes can be brushed, sprayed, poured, or spattered onto the surface.
a. True
b. False
b. False

In glass blowing, air is blown through the tube, causing the hot glass to expand to form a spherical bubble whose contours are shaped through rolling and pulling with various tools.
a. True
b. False
a. True

Native American weaver Dorica Jackson, using a power loom wove the Alaskan Chilkat robe, illustrated in this chapter.
a. True
b. False
b. False

The nose ornament from Peru was fashioned of gold, silver, and turquoise inlay.
a. True
b. False
a. True
楼主:桑田岛  时间:2021-02-15 22:26:58
Pendentives would be found as part of ________.
a. post-and-lintel construction
b. an arch
c. a dome
d. piers
e. veneers
c. a dome

In ________ construction two uprights support a horizontal piece.
a. dome
b. arch
c. vault
d. post-and-lintel
e. pier
d. post-and-lintel

Falling Water (Fig. 13.18), the popular name of a house designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, is properly called the ________.
a. Lever House
b. Griswold House
c. Kaufmann House
d. Farnsworth House
e. Robie House
c. Kaufmann House

Stonehenge (Fig. 14.3), the Temple of Amen-Re in Egypt (Fig. 13.4), and the Parthenon (Fig. 15.9) in Greece were all built using which of the following techniques?
a. post-and-lintel
b. truss
c. vaulting
d. truss
e. dome
a. post-and-lintel

Ribs are a feature of which of the following?
a. post-and-lintel
b. arch
c. vault
d. truss
e. dome
c. vault

Lengths of wood, iron, or steel pieced together in triangular shapes in order to expand the abilities of these materials to span distances best fits which of the following?
a. post-and-beam construction
b. truss construction
c. balloon framing
d. barrel vaulting
e. groin vault
b. truss construction

The wedge-shaped blocks of stone in an arch are called ________.
a. keystones
b. centering
c. trusses
d. centering
e. voussoirs
e. voussoirs

Vertical and horizontal timbers are pieced together (similar to post-and-lintel) in which of the following types of construction?
a. post -and beam
b. truss
c. balloon framing
d. dry masonry
e. pendentives
a. post -and beam

A product of the industrial revolution, dates back to the beginning of the twentieth century is called____________________.
a. shell architecture
b. post-and-beam construction
c. balloon framing
d. dry masonry
e. prefab
c. balloon framing

Which of the following is a lightweight replacement for masonry domes?
a. cast-iron
b. reinforced concrete
c. shell architecture
d. post and lintel
e. pilaster
c. shell architecture


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Which of the following techniques is based on riveted, welded I-beams?
a. steel cage
b. reinforced concrete
c. steel cable
d. pilaster
e. ferro concrete
a. steel cage

A flying buttress would most likely be found on a ________.
a. Roman temple
b. Romanesque church
c. Gothic cathedral
d. Greek temple
e. Native American temple
c. Gothic cathedral

The first material to allow the erection of tall buildings with relatively slender walls was ________.
a. cast iron
b. reinforced concrete
c. steel cable
d. steel cage
e. wood
a. cast iron

Many parallel wires share the stress of support in which of the following techniques?
a. cast iron
b. reinforced concrete
c. steel cable
d. ferro concrete
e. siding
c. steel cable

Dry masonry is stone construction without the benefit of ________.
a. mortar
b. planning
c. large stones
d. wood frames
e. veneers
a. mortar

The Eiffel Tower (Fig. 13.13) and the Crystal Palace (Fig. 13.12) are early examples of which of the following techniques?
a. cast-iron
b. reinforced concrete
c. steel cable
d. steel cage
e. vault technology
a. cast-iron

At Mesa Verde, Colorado, circular, underground ________ served as community centers for early Native American inhabitants.
a. cafes
b. kivas
c. caves
d. temples
e. storage
b. kivas

Arches have many functions, including supporting other structures and serving as actual and symbolic ________.
a. arches
b. floors
c. gateways
d. areas of worship
e. buildings
c. gateways

The new towns of the Roman Empire were laid out largely on a circular grid.
a. True
b. False
b. False

Very early humans found rather than built their shelters.
a. True
b. False
a. True

Architecture is a branch of engineering and not one of the arts.
a. True
b. False
b. False

Steel cable is also flexible, allowing the roadway beneath to sway, within limits, in response to changing weather and traffic conditions.
a. True
b. False
a. True

Reinforced concrete cannot span greater distances than stone, and does not support more weight than steel.
a. True
b. False
b. False
楼主:桑田岛  时间:2021-02-15 22:26:58
Classical
The Parthenon in Athens is an example of the _________ style of architecture.

Hellenistic
Theatricality in sculpture is a characteristic of the __________ period.


Classical
Polykleito's canon of proportions was developed in the ________ period.

Early Classical
Myron's Discobulus (Discus Thrower) was one of the most widely copied works of the _________ period.

Late Classical
Hermes and Dionysus by Praxiteles is an undisputed work of the _________ era.

Archaic
The François Vase is from the _________ period.

Sculpture
The weight-shift principle in __________ created a diagonal balance across the body.

Black
The reducing phase in vase painting creates the _________ figures.

Architecture
Stylobate is used in _________ as a support or base.

Sculpture
S curve results from double weight shift and enhanced a naturalistic effect in __________.

In vase painting
A volute krater is usually divided to help depict scenes ___________.

Metopes
The Doric frieze is divided vertically into compartments called __________.

Aqueduct
A Roman engineering device used to carry water over long distances was called a(n) __________.

Oculus
The sole source of light in the Pantheon is its __________.

Idealism
During the Empire period of Roman history, the pure realism of Republican portrait busts was modified toward something akin to Greek _________.

Equestrian
A(n) ___________ portrait shows the person on horseback.

Doric, Ionic, Corinthian
There were three styles, or orders, in Greek architecture ___________.

Naturalistic
The Late Classical period of Greek art brought a more humanistic and __________ style.

Lysippos
___________ was court sculptor to Alexander the Great.

Alexander the Great
Greek art entered the Hellenistic period under the reign of __________.

Severe
The Early Classical style of Greek art is sometimes called the __________ style.

Domestic dwellings
The interiors of Etruscan tombs were constructed to resemble ____________.

True
The representations of firms according to an accepted notion of beauty or perfection is called idealism.

True
The swelling of the shaft of a column is called entasis.

True
In the Hermes and Dionysus by Praxiteles, we see use of a double weight-shift principle that results in a stance known as an S-curve.

False
In Roman portraiture we see Rome's unique contributions to the arts--that of idealism.

True
At the same time that the Roman Republic ruled in the West, the Qin Dynasty of China--under the First Emperor of Qin, Shi Huangdi--emerged as a dominant power in the East.
楼主:桑田岛  时间:2021-02-15 22:26:58
Early Medieval
The Lindisfarne Gospels are from the _________ period.

Romanesque
An example of _________ architecture, St. Sernin, Toulouse is composed of blocky forms.


Early Christian
The basilica form of Old St. Peter's in Rome is characteristic of __________ architecture.

Byzantine
The _________ Church San Vitale, Ravenna, has a central plan.

Early Medieval
The great "Barbarian Migrations" influenced _________ art.

Gothic
The ________ Cathedral of Chartres has a three-level wall elevation.

Early Medieval
Ottonian Period was a period of the _________ era.

Narthex
A portal, or series of portals, leading to the interior of the church is called a(n) __________.

Apse
The _________ is a semicircular projection at the eastern end of a church.

Transept
A crossing arm at the eastern end of a church, the _________ was often extended in length to resemble a cross.

Nave
The _________ is the long central aisle of a church.

Gothic
The ________ style made extensive use of the pointed arch.

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Gothic
Flying buttresses are found on _________ style architecture.

Romanesque
The rectangular bay system is a development of the _________ style.

Women
The Bayeux Tapestry was almost certainly created by a team of _________ on the commission of Odo, the Bishop of Bayeux.

Istanbul
When Constantine moved his capital to the eastern port city of Byzantium, the city became known as Constantinople; today the city is called _________.

Aachen
Charlemagne established his court at _________, a western German city on the border of present-day Belgium.

San Vitale
Charlemagne's Palatine Chapel has a design that was inspired by Roman architecture and by the Byzantine church of __________ in Ravenna.

Redemption
If the chief iconographic theme of Romanesque sculpture had been damnation, the chief Gothic theme was __________.

Windows
Although the dome of Hagia Sophia is massive, it appears to be light and graceful due to the placement of a ring of _________ at its base.

True
The figures of Mary and Elizabeth on the west portals of Reims Cathedral display a stance called contrapposto.

True
The term Gothic originated among historians who believed that the Goths were responsible for the style of the period.

True
Many works of Christian art from the Early Middle Ages combine characteristics of the small carvings and metalwork of these warrior tribes with symbols of the Christian Faith.

False
The Romanesque style appeared in the closing decades of the tenth century.

False
Hinduism combines ritualized worship of one god with an intellectual tradition that tries to comprehend the meaning of people and the cosmos.

楼主:桑田岛  时间:2021-02-15 22:26:58
Jan Van Eyck
Giovanni arnolfini and his bride was painted by _______

Robert campin
The merode alter piece was painted by _______


Jan van Eyck
_______ created a genre painting about a marriage.

Italian renaissance
Sandro botticelli was a(n) __________ painter known for the birth of venus

Mannerisms
A representative of the _________, jacopo pontormo used most of its style principles

Northern renaissance
The _________ artist Albrecht durer traveled extensively

Matthias Grunewald
Which artist painted the Isenheim Alterpiece one of the most dramatic in the history of art?

Donatello
This artist was the first to create sculptures that combined classicism with realism

Michelangelo
The famed ceiling that is the vault of the chapel of pope sixtus IV was painted by ______________

Leonardo da vinci
______________ excelled at everything; his capabilities in engineering, the natural sciences music, and the arts seemed unlimited.

Piero della francesca
________ was trained in mathematics and is credited with writing the first theoretical treatise on the construction of systematic perspective in art.

Raphael
The school of athens was painted by_______

Titian
A venetian master, ____________ had more in common with artists who would follow him than with his renaissance contemporaries in Florence and Rome

Florence
The early italian renaissance took root and flourished most successfully in the city of ___________

Botticelli
During the latter years of the 15th century in italy, a painter whose work stands in opposition to the prevailing trends was _________, a master of line

Alberti
Some of the purest examples of renaissance classicism lie in The buildings this designed by ______

Orthogonal's
In Leonardo's last supper the viewer is first attracted to the central triangular form of Jesus by _________ that coverage at the head of Jesus

Closed
As was the case and Donatello's David Michael Angelos version was conceived of as a ____________ form

Glazing
Titians venus of urbino is one of the most beautiful examples of the oil _______ technique

Titoretto
Perhaps no other venetian artist anticipated the Baroque style as strongly as __________

Mannerism
During the latter 16th century some Italian artist took the ideals of the high renaissance and turned them around creating the style called _______

International style
Which was a manner of painting common throughout Europe in the late 14th and early 15th centuries?

Printing press
The development of the ___________ made it possible for a durer to disseminate the works of the Italian masters throughout northern Europe

Roman
Florence and Rome witnessed a resurgence of classicism as __________ ruins were excavated in ancient sites

Verrocchio
Leonardo Divinci along with other young artists worked in the shop ran by _________, and innovative sculptor

True
T/F Flanders corresponds to modern day Belgium and the Netherlands

False he assimilated from Leonardo da Vinci
T/F Rafe Al clearly assimilated lessons from the older hi Renaissance artist El Greco

True
T/F the competition for the doors of the baptistery or Florence specified that artists use the Quaterfoil format

True
T/F Piero Della Francescas resurrectiom reveals the artists obsession with order and geometry

True
T/F Brunelleschi was one of the pioneers and the development of systematic laws of one point linear perspective
楼主:桑田岛  时间:2021-02-15 22:26:58
This artist reconciled the divergent styles of harsh Classical and the vibrant Baroque.
a. élisabeth Vigée-Lebrun
b. Nicolas Poussin
c. Caravaggio
d. Jean-Honoré Fragonard
e. Peter Paul Rubens
Nicolas Poussin

Elisabeth Vigée-Lebrun, a(n) ________ artist, was a sucess during her lifetime and was the portrait painter for Marie Antoinette.
a. Flemish
b. Austrian
c. French
d. Dutch
e. Spanish
French

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Caravaggio, a(n) ________ artist, demonstrated theatrical drama and passion in his paintings.
a. Flemish
b. Italian
c. French
d. Dutch
e. Spanish
Italian

Peter Paul Rubens, a(n) ________ artist, created canvases imbued with the dynamic energy and unleashed passions we link to the Baroque era.
a. Flemish
b. Italian
c. French
d. Dutch
e. Spanish
Flemish

This artist painted many pictures of Judith and Holofernes; in some the violence is graphic.
a. Gianlorenzo Bernini
b. Francesco Borromini
c. Artemisia Gentileschi
d. Baciccio
e. Carravagio
Artemisia Gentileschi

Diego Velázquez had contempt for idealized images and preferred to use common folk in his paintings like Caravaggio. Velázquez painted in ________.
a. Flanders
b. Italy
c. France
d. Holland
e. Spain
Spain

Which architect incorporated the Baroque elements of motion, space, and light in buildings?
a. Jules Harduin-Mansart
b. Francesco Borromini
c. Artemisia Gentileschi
d. Baciccio
e. Carlo Maderno
Francesco Borromini

The palace at Versailles is built in a Classical style and is in ________.
a. Flanders
b. Italy
c. France
d. Holland
e. Spain
France

Diego Velázquez's method of creating dissolving forms and recreating the play of light on the surface of objects is the foundation for ________.
a. Classicism
b. Modernism
c. Impressionism
d. Rocco
e. Baroque
Impressionism

Because ________ was Protestant, Rembrandt painted secular subjects.
a. Flanders
b. Italy
c. France
d. Holland
e. Spain
Holland

Nicolas Poussin was a(n) ________ artist who spent much of his early years in Rome painting.
a. Flemish
b. Italian
c. French
d. Dutch
e. Spanish
French

Tenebrism was created during the ________ period.
a. Rococo
b. Roman
c. Classical
d. Renaissance
e. Baroque
Baroque

00:02
01:27
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The Piazza of St. Peter's (Fig. 17-2) is an example of ________ style of architecture.
a. Rococo
b. Hellenistic
c. Mannerist
d. Renaissance
e. Baroque
Baroque

Church of San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane (Fig. 17-14) in Rome is a ________ style church.
a. Rococo
b. Hellenistic
c. Classical
d. Renaissance
e. Baroque
Baroque

The Italian Baroque artist who acquired a lengthy police record for such things as attacking a man with a sword, carrying weapons without a permit, and breaking windows was ________.
a. Caravaggio
b. Rubens
c. Borromini
d. Gentileschi
e. Bernini
Caravaggio

Rubens' style combined the sculptural qualities of ________'s figures with the painterliness and coloration of the Venetians.
a. Borromini
b. Gentileschi
c. Bernini
d. Michelangelo
e. Donatello
Michelangelo

Louis XIV preferred a ________ style of art.
a. Italian Baroque
b. Hellenistic
c. Roman
d. Classical
e. Rococo
Classical

St. Peter's in Rome (Fig. 17-2) brings together work of the finest artists of both the Renaissance and the Baroque, Michelangelo and ________.
a. Poussin
b. Carravagio
c. Borromini
d. Maderno
e. Bernini
Bernini

In Jean-Honoré Fragonard's Happy Accidents of the Swing (Fig. 17-24), we are offered a glimpse of the love games of the ________.
a. religious
b. leisure class
c. working
d. artistic
e. secular
leisure class

If there is a single artist who typifies the Dutch interest in paintings of scenes of daily life, it is ________.
a. Rubens
b. Poussin
c. Vigée-Lebrun
d. Rembrandt
e. Vermeer
Vermeer

Louis XIV guaranteed adherence to his favorite style by forming ________ of art that perpetuated this style.
a. rules
b. clubs
c. requirements
d. academies
e. memberships
academies

While the typical Renaissance ceiling painting was stable--organized by compartments or "frames"—during the Baroque, artists such as Baciccio attempted to create the illusion of a ceiling vault ________ to the heavens.
a. open
b. similar to the Romans
c. with stairs
d. closed
e. that had ladders
open

The Baroque period spans roughly the years from ________.
a. 1600 to 1650
b. 1750 to 1800
c. 1650 to 1700
d. 1600 to 1750
e. 1500 to 1600
1600 to 1750

The word Baroque probably derives from the Portuguese barroco, meaning ________.
a. irregularly shaped pearl
b. genius
c. barracks
d. uncut diamond
e. broken
irregularly shaped pearl

The characteristic(s) of Baroque art is/are ________.
a. space
b. All of these choices.
c. light and theatricality
d. time
e. motion
All of these choices.

Because ________ was Protestant, Rembrandt painted secular subjects.
a. Flanders
b. Italy
c. France
d. Holland
e. Spain
Holland

楼主:桑田岛  时间:2021-02-15 22:26:58
Eugène Delacroix's art reflected the extreme emotion in ________; Death of Sardanapalus (Fig. 19-5) is an example of the exciting literary themes used.
Romanticism

Jean-August-Dominique Ingres, in his exotic nudes, flattened the space in his compositions by placing his imagery in the foreground. This is an example of ________.
Neoclassicism


Claude Monet was a fervent follower of ________ techniques.
Impressionist

Jacques-Louis David was the official painter of the French Revolution. His paintings are considered ________.
Neoclassicism

Gustave Courbet was considered the father of the ________ movement.
Realist

Berthe Morisot, a(n) ________ painter, was the grand daughter of Jean-Honoré Fragonard.
Impressionist

Pierre-Auguste Renoir, a(n) ________ artist, was primarily interested in the effect of light as it played across the surface of objects.
Impressionist

________'s theory of art was illustrated in Vision after the Sermon (Fig. 19-27) (Jacob Wrestling with the Angel).
Paul Gauguin

Edgar Degas's Ballet Rehearsal (Fig. 19-22) (Adagio) shows the influence of photography and Japanese prints on his ________ artwork.
Impressionist

________ is credited with leading the change to abstraction in modern art.
Paul Cézanne

The Post-Impressionist artist ________ left the spontaneity of Impressionist painting for a tightly controlled and scientific approach.
Georges Seurat

________ epitomizes the cliché of the artist who receives recognition only after he dies.
Vincent van Gogh


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The Boating Party (Fig. 19-31) illustrates ________'s interest in merging Impressionism with elements of Japanese art.
Mary Cassatt

Expressionistic painting was adopted by the Norwegian ________, who studied Gauguin's work in Paris.
Edvard Munch

Francisco Goya's most famous depiction of war is the Third of May, 1808 (Fig. 19-6). This painting commemorates the massacre of the citizens of ________.
Madrid, Spain

At the Moulin Rouge (Fig. 19-28) by ________ contains Japanese inspired oblique perspective found in his posters.
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec

Auguste Rodin, a(n) ________ artist, has sculptures that captured the play of light like the Impressionists were working with.
French

The leader of the Hudson River School was ________.
Thomas Cole

Although born in Pittsburgh, ________ spent most of life in France.
Mary Cassatt

The Gross Clinic (Fig. 19-33) comes from ________'s endeavors to excel at human anatomy by working with live models and dissecting corpses.
Thomas Eakins

Arrangement in Black and Gray (Fig. 19-32) exhibits the influence of Gustave Courbet and Japanese prints on ________'s art.
James Abbott McNeill Whistler

The artists of the 15th century looked upon their art as ________.
modern


Jacques-Louis David set the course for modern art with his sudden and decisive break from the ornate and frivolity of the ________.
Rococo

In Neoclassicism, the ________ Empire was often chosen as the model to emulate.
Roman
楼主:桑田岛  时间:2021-02-15 22:26:58
High art and low culture includes popular music, tattoo art, and kitsch.
False

As we consider works of art in the 21st century, we will add to our critical rubric concepts such as:
e. all of the above


Adi Nes' Untitled (Fig. 22.16) recreates_____________.
b. the last supper

The nations of the Caribbean and Latin America have a common history of:
d. all of the above

Cuban artist ________________work is a commentary on the irony that while his country builds its new socialist society, its jewels—like the capital city of Havana— lie in disrepair.
Alexandre Arrechea's

One of Emily Jacir's most literal artworks is a tent stitched with the names of ______________________ villages (Fig. 22.18) that have been depopulated over long years of conflict with Israel.
Palestinian

Among the 21st century women architects to become infamous includes:
Zaha Hadid

The word globalization has become ubiquitous in contemporary life, politics, economics, and art.
True

In the visual arts, one of the effects of globalization is hybridity, or the mixing of the traditions of different cultures to create new blends and new connections.
True

Some aspects of globalization in the arts are a reaction to the retreat of the Asian empires that ruled much of the world throughout the middle of the twentieth century.
False

An artist whose work embraces the concept of hybridity includes:
Takashi Murakami

El Anatsui lives and works in___________,
Nigeria

楼主:桑田岛  时间:2021-02-15 22:26:58
Museum Visit and Report Guidelines

Overview:
To truly become familiar with and to understand art, I believe it is necessary that you gain personal experience with it. Reading about art in a textbook can only help so much. Therefore, one of the requirements for this course is for you to visit an art museum and write a report on your experience there. The museum visit and subsequent written report will reflect your firsthand encounter with the original work of art from a time period we will be studying. Firsthand encounter does not mean you should touch the art!!!

You will turn in the paper online in Blackboard where a spot will be made available. It is highly suggested that you not put off writing the report until that last week since you will need sufficient time to visit the museum and actually write the paper. You may hand in a rough draft to me before the paper is due, if you desire. I will review it and then offer suggestions.


Written Requirements:
To fulfill the assignment, you should examine the collections and pick a work of art in the museum from one of the time periods we will be studying. Then write a reflection paper based on your experience and that work of art. The paper should be a minimum of 2 pages and include the following:

1. Cover Sheet
The cover sheet should simply include your name, the title of your paper and the date

2. Intro
Try to make it a little interesting even though you’ll just cover the basics of the paper. The intro should include the title, artist, date, medium (oil painting, marble sculpture etc.), size and location (what museum holds it?). You should also include a description of the work. Finally end with a thesis statement. Something like: “this work has helped give me a better understanding of the Baroque period art.”

3. Describe your experience going to the museum.
This should be the easiest part of the assignment. Just talk about what it was like as you went through the different galleries. What stood out to you? What was it like wandering through the museum? Finally, just point out the work of art that most stood out to you and what it was like seeing the work in person. And then simply point out the image from the text that you think relates to that work.

4. Describe the works of art
Give me detailed descriptions of the work of art. Talk about the style, the subject matter and what you think the meaning might be. Don’t worry about doing any research here. I am more interested in you explaining what you take away from the work of art.
Throughout the paper you should be supporting your thesis statement with arguments and examples. In this particular section, it would be good to point out how the works of art relate to what you have learned in lecture. Again, I don’t need you to do research here. Just recall what we learned in class and how the works fit into their time periods.
Take into consideration the following questions when writing this section (you don’t necessarily have to discuss each one and it would help if you considered others not listed):
What is the symbolism?
Does the work have a particular function?
Analyze its composition:
oPaintings / reliefs: (Arrangement of form, color, composition, etc.)
oSculpture: Balance of parts, closed or open composition, space, use of light and dark,
attention to surface detail, additive or subtractive, type of stone- easy to carve?
Is it naturalistic? Realistic? Idealistic?
Is there emotional content?

5. Description of what made you choose that work and your experience observing it
Be sure to include your personal view of the work. Why did you choose that particular work of art? Has it helped you gain an appreciation for the time period? The people? How?

6. Conclusion
Nothing special. Just reiterate how the experience has helped you, and briefly restate your introduction.

7. Attach the following to your paper:
Reproduction(s) of the work(s) of art discussed which cannot be found in the book.
A receipt from the museum

This is an observation paper. There is little research required unless you research the “type”
of artwork (i.e. sphinx, sarcophagus, vase, relief etc). Citations must then be used.


Stylistic Requirements:
1.5 pages
Report should include both an introduction and conclusion
12 pt. font
1-inch margins
Cover page (not counted as one of the 2 pages)


Final Notes:
Works of art should be written in italics.
Ideas or quotes from other sources MUST be cited. The paper does not have to be MLA format, but it must be clear if you are using citations.
Eliminate spelling and grammatical errors.
Be sure it is well organized.

Please see me if a trip to a museum is not possible.
楼主:桑田岛  时间:2021-02-15 22:26:58
Project virtual art gallery
rough Draft
Jane
Artists throughout time have been fascinated with capturing the visual imagery of the people who surround them.
I choose human portrait as my project to see what the change is through different art movements.

PART 1 OUTLINE
10 Objects:

PART 2 INTRODUCTION
PART 2.1
Title: Standing female worshiper.
Date:  Early Dynastic IIIa (ca. 2600–2500 B.C.)
Culture:  Sumerian
Medium:  inlaid with shell and lapis lazuli
Dimensions: H. 9 15/16 x W. 3 3/8 x D. 2 1/16 in. (25.2 x 8.5 x 5.2 cm)
Classification: Ancient




Citations:Metmuseum.org, 2021, www.metmuseum.org/blogs/collection-insights/2020/art-for-resilience.

This worn, fragile-looking statue of a Sumerian woman from 2600 B.C. Excavated at the site of Nippur, in Iraq, the statue was one among many sculptures discovered in a temple dedicated to Inanna, the Sumerian goddess of love, abundance, and war. The statues all represented mortal beings—most likely the elite citizens of Nippur—who commissioned images of themselves to stand in perpetual prayer before the deity.
Sources:(Bibliography/Works Cited/References/Works Consulted page after the essay)


PART 2.2
Title: Madonna and Child
Artist: Simone Martini
Date:  1326
Culture:  Miedival
Medium: Tempera on wood, gold ground

Dimensions: Overall 23 1/8 x 15 1/2 in. (58.7 x 39.4 cm); painted surface 22 1/2 x 15 1/8 in. (57.2 x 38.4 cm)Classification: Paintings


Citations:Metmuseum.org, 2020, www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/459136.
The Madonna and Child is understood to be an intimate, devotional image. Some evocations of this understanding come from the burnt edges on the bottom of the original engaged frame caused by burning candles that likely would have sat just beneath
For example, the parapet that sits at the bottom of the painting works as a visual enticement for the viewer to look past and into the moment that is captured between the Virgin and Christ Child. At the same time, the parapet also acts as a barrier between the vernacular world and the sacred

PART 2.3
Title: Fragment of a Floor Mosaic with a Personification of Ktisis
Artist: unknown
Date:  500–550
Culture:  Byzantine Medium: Oil on wood
Dimensions: 59 1/2 x 78 5/8 x 1 in. (151.1 x 199.7 x 2.5 cm)



Citations:Metmuseum.org, 2019, www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/469960..

The bejeweled woman, holding the measuring tool for the Roman foot, is identified by the restored Greek inscription as Ktisis, a figure personifying the act of generous donation or foundation. The man with a cornucopia, originally one of a pair flanking her, has the Greek inscription “good” by his head, half of a text that probably said, “good wishes.” The fragment, made of marble and glass tesserae (small pieces of colored material), is typical of the exceptional mosaics created throughout the Byzantine world in the 500s.


PART 2.4
Title: Portrait of a Woman
Artist: Agnolo Bronzino
Date:  1550
Medium: Oil on wood
Dimensions: Framed: 81.5 x 68.5 x 5 cm (32 1/16 x 26 15/16 x 1 15/16 in.); Unframed: 60 x 48.8 cm (23 5/8 x 19 3/16 in.)
Classification: Renasaince






Citations:Anonymous. “Portrait of a Woman.” Cleveland Museum of Art, 31 Oct. 2018, www.clevelandart.org/art/1972.121.
Bronzino was court painter to Cosimo I de’Medici, the Duke of Florence. Though the woman cannot be definitively identified, she was likely affiliated with the Medici court. As in most of the portraits in this gallery, Bronzino emphasizes wealth, status, and courtly refinement above personality or individualized expression. The plain background further accentuates the work’s monumentality and grandeur, despite its small scale. The hand placed against the chest with elegantly spread fingers extends back to an ancient Greek pose of modesty, here emphasizing the proper comportment of a woman of high status. The sitter wears a linen partlet (collar) delicately embroidered in matt stitch, part of which is, like her cuffs, trimmed in fine lace.
PART 2.5

Full title: Allegory of Patience
Artist: Giorgio Vasari
Artist dates: 1511 - 1574
Date made: 1552
Medium: Oil on canvas
Dimensions 197.8 × 108.8 cm


Citations:
“Giorgio Vasari | Allegory of Patience | L1270 | National Gallery, www.nationalgallery.org.uk/paintings/giorgio-vasari-allegory-of-patience.
The woman, huddling in the cold, personifies the virtue of patience. She waits as drops from the water clock, ever so slowly, wear out the stone, while the inscribed motto translates as 'enduring patience'. The monumentality of the figure and iridescent colours are indebted to Michelangelo, who likely provided its design.
PART 2.6

Title: Madame Roulin and Her Baby
Artist: Vincent van Gogh
Date: 1888
Medium: Oil on canvas
Dimensions: 25 x 20 1/8 in.
Classification: Paintings

Classification: Impressionism

Citations:
Metmuseum.org, 2021, www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/459123. Accessed 19 Jan. 2021.
This vigorously painted portrait of Augustine Roulin and her infant daughter, Marcelle, is one of Van Gogh’s many evocative renderings of the Roulin family, undertaken some six months after the artist relocated from Paris to Arles. Van Gogh painted the entire family of the local postman Joseph Roulin. Here, the chubbycheeked infant is the focus of the enterprise. Her heightened expression in thickly painted brushwork suggests that the baby may have posed for van Gogh, swaddled in her mother’s embrace. Augustine Roulin, by contrast, is an abbreviated presence.
PART 2.7

Title: Woman with a Rake
Artist:Jean-François
Date: probably 1856
Medium: Oil on canvas
Dimensions: 15 5/8 x 13 1/2 in. (39.7 x 34.3 cm)
Classification:Realism Paintings

Citations:
Metmuseum.org, 2021, www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/437099. Accessed 19 Jan. 2021.
Millet first treated this subject in a woodcut, one of ten in the series Labors of the Fields that were published in a popular periodical in 1853. The art dealer Martinet, in whose gallery such avant-garde artists as Courbet and Manet exhibited, included this painting in a show in 1860.
PART 2.8

Title: Maria
Artist: Kees van Dongen (Dutch, Delfshaven, The Netherlands 1877–1968 Monte Carlo)
Date: 1907–10
Medium: Oil on canvas
Dimensions: 25 1/2 x 21 3/8 in. (64.8 x 54.3 cm.)
Classification:Fauvism Paintings


Citations:
Metmuseum.org, 2020, www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/461689.
This portrait entitled Maria, presumably after the model who sat for the picture, captures the direct gaze of the sitter. The painting was quickly rendered with a large brush and intense, unblended color. Van Dongen’s use of unblended color reflects his exposure to and general association with Fauvism and Expressionism, two artistic movements in Paris characterized by bold, sometimes violent use of color. Painted with a certain stylization, Van Dongen’s female sitters often resemble one another with their large, blackened eyes and pale white flesh tones.
PART 2.9

Title: Self-Portrait with a Cigar
Artist: Edvard Munch (Norwegian, Løten 1863–1944 Ekely)
Date: 1908–9
Medium: Lithograph
Dimensions: plate: 22 5/16 x 17 15/16 inches (56.7 x 45.6 cm)
Classification:Expressionism Prints


Citations:
Metmuseum.org, 2020, www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/352328.
Self-Portrait with a CigarSelf-Portrait with Cigarette is loaded with subtle contradictions. Lacking an identifiable environment and depicting the artist viewed frontally and slightly from below, the self-portrait represents Munch as a man directly engaging his viewer yet distanced from the world.
PART 2.10

Title: Marilyn
Artist: Andy Warhol
Printer: Aetna Silkscreen Products, Inc.
Printer: Du-Art Displays
Date: 1967
Medium: Screenprint
Dimensions: Sheet: 6 x 6 in. (15.2 x 15.2 cm)
Classification: Pop Art Prints


Citations:Metmuseum.org, 2020, www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/352328.
Around 1962, Warhol adopted a more graphic and detached style comprising bold and often contrasting colors, crisp outlines, and commercial imagery. Screenprinting was well suited for his art as it enabled him to repeat images derived from photographic sources multiple times—even within the same painting or print—in a variety of media and colors. It also allowed him to highlight both the detached quality of the process and the imperfections (such uneven tone, smudges, gaps, and signs of irregular printing) often found in commercial production.

Part 3. references


1.Benzel, K., 2020. Art For Resilience: Sumerian Standing Female Worshipper And More. [online] Metmuseum.org. Available at: <https://www.metmuseum.org/blogs/collection-insights/2020/art-for-resilience>
2.Martini, S., 2019. Madonna And Child. [online] Metmuseum.org. Available at: <https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/459136>
3.Metmuseum.org. 2020. Fragment Of A Floor Mosaic With A Personification Of Ktisis500–550, With Modern Restoration. [online] Available at: <https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/469960?searchField=All&sortBy=Relevance&ft=Byzantine+art++collection&offset=0&rpp=20&pos=20>
4.Cleveland Museum of Art. 2021. Portrait Of A Woman. [online] Available at: <https://www.clevelandart.org/art/1972.121> [Accessed 20 January 2021].
The Cleveland Museum of Art. Handbook of the Cleveland Museum of Art/1978. Cleveland, OH: The Cleveland Museum of Art, 1978. Reproduced: p. 112 archive.org
The Cleveland Museum of Art. The Cleveland Museum of Art Catalogue of Paintings, Part 3: European Paintings of the 16th, 17th, and 18th Centuries. Cleveland, OH: The Cleveland Museum of Art, 1982. Mentioned: p. 310-312; Reproduced: p. 311


5.The National Gallery, L., n.d. Giorgio Vasari | Allegory Of Patience | L1270 | National Gallery, London. [online] Nationalgallery.org.uk. Available at: <https://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/paintings/giorgio-vasari-allegory-of-patience>

6.Metmuseum.org. n.d. Madame Roulin And Her Baby. [online] Available at: <https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/459123>


7. Metmuseum.org. n.d. Woman With A Rake. [online] Available at: <https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/437099>

8.Metmuseum.org. n.d. Maria. [online] Available at: <https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/461689>

9. Metmuseum.org. n.d. Self-Portrait With A Cigar. [online] Available at: <https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/360176>3
10.Metmuseum.org. n.d. Marilyn. [online] Available at: <https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/352328> [Accessed 20 January 2021].
楼主:桑田岛  时间:2021-02-15 22:26:58





楼主:桑田岛  时间:2021-02-15 22:26:58



楼主:桑田岛  时间:2021-02-15 22:26:58





楼主:桑田岛

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帖子分类:我的大学

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