Reading comp PrepTest 125 · Section 3 · Question 10

Passage

Questions 8-15  .        The painter Roy Lichtenstein helped to define pop  . art—the movement that incorporated commonplace  . objects Remaining source text redacted.
Passage walkthrough
Passage Summary

Topic: Humanities


Paragraph 1

  • Paragraph note
    • Lichtenstein’s style and accomplishments
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Definition of “pop art”:
      • Common objects and commercial art in paintings
    • Author’s view on Lichtenstein’s accomplishment:
      • Poked fun at the pretentious art world and expressed a seriousness of theme (more than parody)
    • Author’s attitude: “complex result” (line 6); “managed to convey” (line 8); “transcend mere parody” (lines 9-10)

Paragraph 2

  • Paragraph note
    • Pop art as a reaction to late abstract expressionism
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Conventional view:
      • Pop art emerged in response to abstract expressionism
    • Author’s view:
      • Pop artists like Lichtenstein reacted to the second generation of abstract expressionism (which lost most of power)
    • Author’s attitude: “at first difficult to see” (line 12); “had already lost much of its force” (line 21); “powerful early abstract expressionist work” (lines 22-23); “seemed airy, high-minded, and overly lyrical” (line 25); “fading emotional power of abstract expressionism, rather than an aloof attempt to ignore it” (lines 28-30)

Paragraph 3

  • Paragraph note
    • Other dimension of Lichtenstein; contrast with other pop art
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Author’s view
      • If Lichtenstein was just a parody, not as much power; also motivated to depict contemporary life (missing from other art)
      • Lichtenstein reconciles cartoons and fine art, parody and feeling
    • List of elements in Lichtenstein's work that was taken from contemporary life:
      • Romances, war stories, automobiles, hot dogs, table lamps
    • Comparison with other pop art, according to author:
      • Lichtenstein’s work was different from with other pop art and late abstract expressionism because it expressed a naive nostalgia/sweetness
    • Author’s attitude: “it would possess only the reflective power that parodies have” (lines 33-34); “excess of sophistication” (lines 46); “an inner sweetness” (line 51); “faith in reconciliation” (line 53)

Main Point: Lichtenstein’s use of comic book styles made the depth in his work difficult to see, but he was able to successfully poke fun at the art world’s pretensions while also conveying a seriousness of theme and a naive nostalgia about contemporary life.

Key Lines?

Lines 5-10 - The Author’s overall view of Lichtenstein’s art and accomplishments

Lines 15-17 - Standard art history’s view on pop art’s origins

Lines 27-30 - How Lichtenstein fits into that history

Lines 35-38 - What made Lichtenstein’s art more than just parody

Lines 43-48 - Lichtenstein’s art compared to other pop art and abstract expressionism

Lines 52-55 - Closing opinion by the Author

Meta-Structure?

Importance of Subject: Some humanities passages don’t necessarily present an artist as being an innovator as much as they describe the importance of their work. These generally set the work in its historical context and discuss influences on the artist, but they focus on the accomplishments and characteristics of that artist’s work rather than what they did “first.” Here, the author starts by talking about Lichtenstein as someone who “helped to define pop art” (Lines 1-2), placing his work in its historical context. The author goes on to talk about the “complex result” of his work (Lines 5-10), before going on to flesh out the historical context of it (Paragraph 2). The author then explains how Lichtenstein’s work transcended mere parody (Lines 31-43) and contrasts Lichtenstein with previous and contemporary work (Lines 43-48) to highlight his specific achievement. When a passage falls into this Meta-Structure, the main point focuses on how the author characterizes the artist’s work and their accomplishments, leading to our anticipated main point above.

List: While a minor part of the passage, there’s a list of elements in Lichtenstein’s work in Lines 38-42. There will likely be a question that asks about this list.

Last Thoughts?

There were descriptions of several styles here, even splitting abstract expressionism and pop art into sub-styles, so we should have a general idea of each, as there will likely be questions about them:

  • Early abstract expressionism - Private emotions with nonrepresentational techniques (Lines 17-19)
  • Late abstract expressionism - As above, but “airy, high-minded, and overly lyrical” (Lines 24-25)
  • Pop art - Commonplace objects and commercial-art techniques (Lines 2-3)
  • Some pop art - Jaded cynicism about consumer culture (Line 44)
  • Lichtenstein - Pop art, but deliberate naivete, nostalgic, and sweet, with a focus on the depiction of contemporary life (Line 38; Line 45; Line 51)

Question prompt

The author most likely Remaining source text redacted.
Why the credited answer is right

Credited answer: A

The notes below walk through why it fits the stem and how to eliminate the rest.

Question Type

Humanities

Strategy Overview

Review the immediate and broader context in which this list is mentioned, then find an answer reflecting what it’s a list of

Answer Anticipation

This question asks us why the author inserted the list of themes and objects influencing and appearing in Lichtenstein’s paintings into the third paragraph. Unless a detail conflicts with the paragraph's purpose, the author probably mentioned that detail to advance the paragraph's role. So reviewing the third paragraph’s role, which we hopefully wrote down in the notes on our scratch paper, will generally reveal why the author included that detail.In this case, our note for the third paragraph is “Other dimension of Lichtenstein; contrast with other pop art.” In the first half of that paragraph, the author argues that Lichtenstein’s art transcended parody to have a serious theme. Specifically, the author argues that Lichtenstein’s art provided a naive (Line 45), nostalgic (Line 50), and sweet (Line 51) depiction of modern life (Line 38), something missing from art at the time (Line 37).Does that list serve that purpose? Absolutely. The author says the list of items in Lichtenstein’s paintings provides a “reflection[] of the culture Lichtenstein inhabited.” So the list is meant to highlight Lichtenstein’s depiction of the contemporary world and culture that he lived in. Let’s find an answer stating as much.

Answer choices

  1. A
    show that the paintings Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice A matches the stem

    (A) Does this say the list is meant to highlight Lichtenstein’s depiction of the contemporary world and culture that he lived in?

    Indeed. The author brought up the list after arguing that Lichtenstein’s work depicted contemporary life. After enumerating the items on the list, the author claims that the elements on the list reflected the culture Lichtenstein lived in. This answer restates that purpose, so it’s correct.

  2. B
    support the claim that Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice B is not credited

    (B) Does this say the list is meant to highlight Lichtenstein’s depiction of the contemporary world and culture that he lived in?

    Nope. The author opens the third paragraph by saying that Lichtenstein’s work wasn’t just parodic in intent. The author wouldn’t support the claim with a list that showed Lichtenstein’s work was intended as parody.

  3. C
    contrast Lichtenstein's approach to Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice C is not credited

    (C) Does this say the list is meant to highlight Lichtenstein’s depiction of the contemporary world and culture that he lived in?

    No. The contrast with abstract expressionism was the focus of Paragraph 2, not Paragraph 3 where the list exists.

  4. D
    suggest the emotions that Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice D is not credited

    (D) Does this say the list is meant to highlight Lichtenstein’s depiction of the contemporary world and culture that he lived in?

    Negative. The author discusses the emotions in Lichtenstein’s art later in Paragraph 3. In the first half of the paragraph — where the list is located — the author discusses Lichtenstein’s “impulse towards realism” (Line 36).

  5. E
    endorse Lichtenstein's attitude toward Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice E is not credited

    (E) Does this say the list is meant to highlight Lichtenstein’s depiction of the contemporary world and culture that he lived in?

    Not quite. Lichtenstein’s attitude towards consumer culture is brought up after the list and after a pivot (“But”), so the list is unlikely to serve as a point in favor of that view. On top of that, the sentence with the list didn’t display any author’s attitude that would allow us to conclude that the author endorses Lichtenstein’s view!

What this tests

Question analytics

Based on historical answer selection rates for this question.

Answer choice distribution

  1. A Credited 82%
  2. B 4%
  3. C 6%
  4. D 5%
  5. E 3%

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Discussion

  • A vs D 3 replies

    Started by ShannonOh22

  • Explanation please 3 replies

    Started by Farbod