Arts: Time Trans-six Flashcards

1
Q

“36 Views of Mount Fuji”

“#9: Fuji View Field in Owari Province”

A

Hokusai

Japanese

Ukiyo-e

“#10: Ejiri in Suruga Province”

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2
Q

“A Young Girl Reading”

A

Jean-Honore Fragonard

French

Rococo

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3
Q

“Abraham’s Sacrific of Isaac”

A

Lorenzo Ghiberti

Florentine

Goldsmith

(Beat Brunelleschi for it)

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4
Q

“Adoration of the Magi in the Arena Chapel”

A

Giotto

Florentine

Late Gothic

(for the Scrovegni family, like most of his other works)

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5
Q

“Allegory of Gluttany and Lust”

A

Hieronymus Bosch

Dutch

Early Netherlandish Renaissance

(man rides barrel wearing funnel)

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6
Q

“Allegory of the Planets and Continents”

A

Tiepolo

Italian

Baroque

(Depicts the four continents in a massive fresco above the grand staircase of the Wurzburg Residence)

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7
Q

“American Embassy in Athens”

A

athens #greece

Walter Gropius

German

Bauhaus

(inspired by the Parthenon)

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8
Q

“American-Type Painting”

A

Clement Greenburg

American

(attributed Jackson Pollack’s style to Janet Sobel)

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9
Q

“Anatomical Pieces”

A

Theodore Gericault

French

Romanticism

(severed limbs)

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10
Q

“Aphrodite of Cnidus”

A

Praxiteles

Greek

Sculpture

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11
Q

“Baby Flat Top”

A

Alexander Calder

American

Mobiles

(standing)

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12
Q

“Backgrounds for the ballet ‘Aleko’”

A

Marc Chagall

Russian

Surrealism

(worked with Léonide Massine to create large, colorful backdrops)

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13
Q

“Baker House at MIT”

A

MIT #boston #mass

Alvar Aalto

Finnish-American

Architecture

(Included the “moon garden” in its dining hall)

(Also made all the furniture for it)

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14
Q

“Balloon Girl”

A

Banksy

British

Graffiti

(On the West Bank Barrier)

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15
Q

“Banqueting House at Whitehall”

A

Inigo Jones

British

Architecture

(Rubens painted The Apotheosis of James I on ceiling)

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16
Q

“Bardi Altarpiece”

A

Parmigianino

Italian

Mannerism

(John the Evangelist holds a chalice full of snakes as he witnesses the mystical marriage of St. Catherine)

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17
Q

“Basilica of the Fourteen Holy Helpers”

A

Balthasar Neumann

German

Architecture

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18
Q

“Bent Pyramid in Dahshur”

(Also, he constructed the Medium and Red Pyramids)

A

egypt

Sneferu

Egyptian

Pyramidian

(pharaoh of the fourth dynasty)

“Red Pyramid”

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19
Q

“Big Electric Chair”

A

Andy Warhol

American

Pop Art

(Sing Sing prison)

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20
Q

“Boy with a Squirrel”

A

John Singleton Copley

American

Portraiture

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21
Q

“Bust of Bindo Altoviti”

A

Cellini

Italian

Mannerism

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22
Q

“Calumny of Apelles”

A

Sandro Botticelli

Italian

Renaissance

(Two women pull on the hair of an unjust judge while a naked representation of truth points to heaven)

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23
Q

“Camoflage Self-Portrait”

A

Andy Warhol

American

Pop Art

(hair sticks up)

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24
Q

“Campbell’s Soup Can”

A

Claude Monet

Argentinian

Blue Rider

(middle part of a triptych featuring Adam, Moses, and Jesus)

(currently in St. Peter’s Basilica)

(adapted from a lost da Vinci work)

(called ‘degenerate’ by Nazis, mostly because they don’t like soup)

(the above information is trolling at its best)

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25
Q

“Castelfranco Altarpiece”

A

Giorgione

Italian

High Renaissance

(depicted Madonna between St. Francis and St. Nicasius)

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26
Q

“Ceiling of the Paris Opera House”

A

Marc Chagall

Russian

Surrealism

(Also, people made it into a watch, and it looks pretty cool if you ask the author of this card)

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27
Q

“Central Library in Seattle”

A

seattle #washington

Rem Koolhaas

Dutch

Architecture

(Inside of that library is the Scandiuzzi Writers’ Room designed by Deborah Jones)

(also has a ‘book spiral’, where the entire library is a huge spiral categorized by Dewey Decimal)

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28
Q

“Chandelier in Victoria and Albert Museum in London”

A

Dale Chihuly

American

Glass sculpture

(wears eyepatch)

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29
Q

“Chesterwood in Stockbridge, Mass.”

A

mass

Henry Bacon and Daniel Chester French

American

Sculpture / Architecture

(French’s summer home)

(These two essentially built the Lincoln Memorial)

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30
Q

“Children Below Hole”

A

Banksy

British

Graffiti

(on Palestinian side of West Bank Barrier)

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31
Q

“Christmas Homecoming”

A

Norman Rockwell

American

Realism

(Old woman on left is Grandma Moses)

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32
Q

“Colossal Head #1”

A

The Olmecs

Mexican

Sculpture

(The one true Olmec)

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33
Q

“Constellation”

A

Alexander Calder

American

Mobile

(Marcel Duchamp nickname them ‘constellations’)

(maybe named ‘mobiles’)

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34
Q

“Conversion of Saint Paul”

A

Tintoretto

Italian

Renaissance

(white horses, the one on bridge being pushed by man in pink)

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35
Q

“Conversion of Saint Paul”

A

Bellini

Italian

Baroque

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36
Q

“Conversion of Saint Paul”

A

Luca Giordano

Italian

Renaissance

(Cloudy sky)

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37
Q

“Crossing the Styx in the Divine Comedy”

A

Gustave Dore

French

Illustration

(Did the rest of the Divine Comedy)

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38
Q

“Cubisme”

A

Albert Gleizes and Jean Metzinger

French

Cubist

(Cubism movement was defend in this book)

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39
Q

“Cupid Carving His Bow”

A

Parmigianino

Italian

Mannerism

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40
Q

“Danzantes”

A

The Zapotecs

Mexican

Sculpture

(caputed opponents)

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41
Q

“Death and Diaster series”

“Green Car Crash”

A

Andy Warhol

American

Pop Art

“Red Car Crash”

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42
Q

“Derby at Epsom”

A

Theodore Gericault

French

Romanticism

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43
Q

“Diana and Actaeon”

A

Titian

Italian

High Renaissance

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44
Q

“Don Quixote in his Library”

A

Gustave Dore

French

Illustration

(did the rest of Don Quixote as well)

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45
Q

“Dying Slave”

A

Michelangelo

Italian

Sculpture

(for tomb of Julius II, now in Louvre)

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46
Q

“Ecce Homo”

A

Hieronymus Bosch

Dutch

Early Netherlandish Renaissance

(Sees Jesus standing above the words “Salve nos Christe redemptor” and two translucent patrons

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47
Q

“Education of the Princess”

A

Peter Paul Rubens

Flemish

Baroque

(Part of the Marie de’ Medici cycle)

(shows Hermes rushing in to give caduceus)

(Central female is being tutored by the 3 graces)

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48
Q

“Eight Elvises”

A

Andy Warhol

American

Pop Art

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49
Q

“Elective Affinities”

A

Rene Magritte

Belgian

Surrealism

(egg within a cage)

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50
Q

“Et in Arcadia ego”

“Arcadian Shepherds”

A

Nicolas Poussin

French

Classicism

(group of shepherds examining a tomb in this title region)

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51
Q

“Ex Nihilo on the National Cathedral”

A

Frederick Hart

American

Sculpture

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52
Q

“Fagus Factory in Germany”

A

Walter Gropius and Adolf Meyer

German

Bauhaus

(shoe factory, early work for Gropius)

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53
Q

“FDR Memorial”

A

dc

Lawrence Haplin

American

Landscape Architecture

(Features sculpture by Leonard Baskin and George Segal)

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54
Q

“Fountain Courtyard at Hampton Court”

A

Sir Christopher Wren

British

Architecture

(London)

(huge lamp on column)

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55
Q

“Fourth of July”

A

Grandma Moses

American

Folk Art

(Hangs in White House)

(Baseball game in center)

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56
Q

“Girl at Sewing Machine”

A

Edward Hopper

American

Realism

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57
Q

“Harvard Graduate Center”

A

harvard #boston #mass

Walter Gropius

German

Bauhaus

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58
Q

“Hermes and the Infant Dionysus”

A

Praxiteles

Greek

Sculpture

(the broken hand once held grapes)

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59
Q

“Homage to Mack Sennett”

A

Rene Magritte

Belgian

Surrealism

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60
Q

“Homesickness”

A

Rene Magritte

Belgian

Surrealism

(man is winged)

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61
Q

Name of town that Louis J. Caldor drove through and discovered the paintings of Grandma Moses for $3-$5 in the drug store window

A

Hoosick Falls, New York

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62
Q

“Horse Frightened by Lightning”

A

Theodore Gericault

French

Romanticism

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63
Q

“Horse Thief”

A

George Caleb Bingham

American

Luminism

(lost painting, rediscovered in 1999)

(painted 5 years before he traveled to Dusseldorf)

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64
Q

“Indiana Murals”

A

Thomas Hart Benton

American

Muralist

(for the 1933 Century of Progress show in Chicago)

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65
Q

“Irony of Negro Policeman”

A

Jean-Michel Basquiat

American

Graffiti

66
Q

“La belle ferronnière”

A

Leonardo da Vinci

Italian

Renaissance

67
Q

“Leconfield Head”

A

Praxiteles

Greek

Sculpture

(like the Aphrodite of Cnidus)

68
Q

“Les mobiles de Calder”

A

Jean-Paul Sartre

(called mobiles “small, local festivals”)

69
Q

“Lily of Force”

A

Alexander Calder

American

Mobile

(standing version)

70
Q

“Sculpture of This Bearded Guy Sitting Down On a Throne of Marble Like He’s the King of the Universe or Something”

A

Daniel Chester French

American

Sculpture

71
Q

“London: A PIlgrimmage”

A

Gustave Dore

French

Illustration

72
Q

“LOVE”

A

Robert Indiana

American

Pop Art

(for a Christmas Card for the MOMA)

73
Q

“Madonna of Chancellor Rolin”

A

Jan van Eyck

Flemish

(man on left kneels and prays over a Bible)

(angel with multi-colored wings holds up an ornate crown)

(under central arch, a man in black holding a walking stick stands next to a man who is leaning over a wall)

(reflectograms revealed that a gold purse was originally to hang from the figure on the left of this work)

(small table with blue table cloth)

(the parish church depicted in the background may be a celebration of the recently signed Treaty of Arras)

(May be a confessional comes from the capitaldepicting the drunkenness of Noah above patron’s head)

74
Q

“Madonna of the Foligno”

A

Raphael

Italian

Renaissance

(during his Roman period)

75
Q

“Madonna of the Goldfinch”

A

Raphael

Italian

Renaissance

(St. John holds a goldfinch)

76
Q

“Madonna of the Harpies”

A

Andrea del Sarto

Italian

Mannerism

(two title winged figures grip the legs of Madonna, who is standing on a pedestal decorated with sphinxes)

77
Q

“MECCA Arena in Milwaukee”

A

milwaukee #wisconsin

Robert Indiana

American

Pop Art

(Home of the Bucks)

78
Q

“Merode Altarpiece”

A

Robert Campin

Early Netherlandish

Triptychist

(features a right panel where Joseph can be seen working with his carpentry tools.)

(The Holy Ghost literally flies in from a window in its center panel)

79
Q

Technique using grayscale printmaking method, made paintings like Watson and the Shark viral, like this one by Valentine Greene

A

Mezzotint

80
Q

“Milwaukee Art Museum”

A

milwaukee #wisconsin

Santiago Calatrava

Spanish

Architecture

(The building that looks like a ship)

(Building is Windhover Hall)

(Contains wing-like sunscreens called the Burke Brise Soleil)

(Art museum includes the Kahler Building and the Eero Saarinen’s War Memorial Center)

81
Q

“MLK Memorial”

A

dc

Lei Yixin

Chinse

Architecture

(This is a picture of the ‘Stone of Hope’ which is what MLK is carved on between the ‘Mountain of Despair’)

82
Q

“Monument to Balzac”

A

Auguste Rodin

French

Sculpture

(The final sculpture, where this writer’s eyes were “lost in a dream”, was ultimately rejected and ridiculed.)

(Boulevard du Montparnasse)

83
Q

“Monument to the March Dead”

A

Walter Gropius

German

Bauhaus

(based on lightning bolt)

(dedicated to the memory of nine workers who died in Weimar resisting the Kapp Putsch)

84
Q

“Moonlight Scene: Castle on the Rhine”

A

George Caleb Bingham

American

Luminism

(painted in Dusseldorf)

85
Q

“Moses”

A

Michelangelo

Italian

Sculpture

(tomb of Julius II)

86
Q

“Nadar Elevating Photography to Art”

A

Honore Daumier

French

Printmaking

87
Q

“Namesake House in Lincoln, Mass.”

A

mass

Walter Gropius

German

Bauhaus

88
Q

“Narcissus”

A

Cellini

Italian

Mannerism

(An effete nude touches his left hand to his curly hair as he looks down and to his right)

89
Q

“Nymph of Fontainebleau”

A

Cellini

Italian

Mannerism

(nude female reclining amidst boars and dogs, with her arm around a stag)

(found in Palace of Fontainebleau in Paris)

(made after fleeing Italy in the Sack of Rome)

90
Q

“Opening of the Doors of the Spanish Inquisition”

A

Theodore Gericault

French

Romanticism

(only completed the preparatory sketches for the epic)

(does not look like this)

91
Q

“Pallas and the Centaur”

A

Sandro Botticelli

Italian

Renaissance

(A woman holds a giant axe and grabs the hair of the other title figure)

92
Q

“Peace Bridge in Calgary”

A

Santiago Calatrava

Spanish

Architect

93
Q

“Peace Paintings”

A

Robert Indiana

American

Pop Art

(commemorates the 9/11 attacks)

94
Q

“Perseus with the Head of Medusa”

A

Cellini

Italian

Mannerism

(in the Loggia dei Lanzi)

(curved sword in one hand and an object spewing blood from its severed neck in the other)

95
Q

Pest Control represents this artist

A

Banksy

British

Graffiti

96
Q

“Pictoral Quilt”

A

Harriet Powers

American

Quilt

(One of two. Other is Bible Quilt)

97
Q

“Point and Line to Plane”

A

Wassily Kandinsky

Russian

Blue Rider

98
Q

“Pope Paul III and his Grandsons”

A

Titian

Italian

High Renaissance

(Ottavio bowing towards red shoe of Pope)

99
Q

“Portrait of Innocent X”

A

Diego Velazquez

Spanish

Baroque

100
Q

“Portrait of Sir Theodore Turquet de Mayerne”

A

Peter Paul Rubens

Flemish

Baroque

(physician of Charles I)

(Did while in England)

101
Q

“Portrait of Bindo Altoviti”

A

Raphael

Italian

Renaissance

102
Q

“Rebellious Slave”

A

Michelangelo

Italian

Scultpure

(for tomb of Julius II, now in Louvre)

103
Q

“Salt Cellar”

A

Cellini

Italian

Mannerism

(A miniature triumphal arch is next to Ceres, who lies across from Neptune)

104
Q

SAMO was his earlier signature

Also nicknamed ‘The Radiant Child’

(same old shit)

A

Jean-Michel Basquiat

American

Graffiti

105
Q

School founded by Walter Gropius

A

Bauhaus

(Founded in Weimar)

(later directed by Mies van der Rohe)

(rhymes with “cow house”)

106
Q

“Self-portrait of Gaspard-Felix Tournachon”

A

Nadar

French

Photographer

107
Q

“Seven Deadly Sins”

A

Hieronymous Bosch

Dutch

Early Netherlandish Renaissance

(image of a flat landscape encased in a glass sphere, and set God’s all-seeing eye at the center)

108
Q

“Simultaneous Windows on the City”

A

Robert Delaunay

French

Orphism

(Broke away from Cubism)

109
Q

“Spring Shower”

A

John Steuart Curry

American

Regionalism

110
Q

“St Jerome in his Study”

A

Jan van Eyck

Flemish

(red robe, red hat, reading book)

111
Q

“St. Jerome Writing”

A

Caravaggio

Italian

Baroque

(red robe)

112
Q

“St. John the Baptist (preaching)”

A

Auguste Rodin

French

Sculpture

(Walking Man but with head)

113
Q

“Stefaneschi Triptych”

A

Giotto

Florentine

Late Gothic

(Back depicts the executions of St. Peter and Paul and whose front shows its donor offering it to Peter)

114
Q

“Street Crossing”

A

George Segal

American

Pop Art / Sculpture

(most of his works looks like things)

115
Q

“Street, Berlin”

A

Ernst Kirchner

German

Expressionism

(Die Brucke movement)

116
Q

“Study of a Portrait of Innocent X”

A

Francis Bacon

British

Modernism

(based on Velazquez work)

117
Q

“Suckling Madonna Enthroned”

“The Madonna in Her Chamber”

“Lucca Madonna”

A

Jan van Eyck

Flemish

(four lions on throne)

(Jesus at the tit)

118
Q

“Sundial Bridge at Turtle Bay”

A

Santiago Calatrava

Spanish

Architecture

119
Q

“The Age of Bronze”

A

Auguste Rodin

French

Sculpture

(title nude figure places his right hand on the top of his head in this work by Auguste Rodin. The central figure also bends his right knee forward, producing a sense of mental awakening.)

120
Q

“The Apotheosis of James I”

A

Peter Paul Rubens

Flemish

Baroque

(On ceiling of Banqueting House at Whitehall)

121
Q

“The Banjo Lesson”

A

Henry Ossawa Tanner

American

Realism

122
Q

“The Bolt”

A

Jean-Honore Fragonard

French

Rococo

(depicts a woman who tries to stop a man from locking a door)

123
Q

“The Burghers of Calais”

A

Auguste Rodin

French

Sculpture

(France)

(Edward offered to spare the people of the city if any six of its top leaders would surrender themselves to him, presumably to be executed. Edward demanded that they walk out wearing nooses around their necks, and carrying the keys to the city and castle. One of the wealthiest of the town leaders, Eustache de Saint Pierre, volunteered first, and five other burghers joined with him.[1] Saint Pierre led this envoy of volunteers to the city gates. It was this moment, and this poignant mix of defeat, heroic self-sacrifice, and willingness to face imminent death that Rodin captured in his sculpture, scaled somewhat larger than life.)

124
Q

“The Concealed Enemy”

A

George Caleb Bingham

American

Luminism

(Native American with a gun hiding behind tree stump)

125
Q

“The Coronation of Napoleon and Josephine”

A

Jacques Louis David

Dutch

Neoclassicism

(depicts himself in the stands)

(two large vaults with green curtains)

(Josephine on a pillow)

126
Q

“The County Election”

A

George Caleb Bingham

American

Luminism

127
Q

“The Death of Chatham”

A

John Singleton Copley

American

Portraiture

(showed a member of the House of Lords suffering a stroke)

128
Q

“The Defeat of the Floating Batteries at Gibraltar”

A

John Singleton Copley

American

Portraiture

129
Q

“The Dying Gaul”

A

Attributed to Epigonus

Greek

Sculpture

(a Roman copy of the original Hellenistic piece, depicts a fallen Celtic warrior on his shield with his sword fallen beside him)

130
Q

“The Embarkation of the Queen of Sheba”

A

Claude Lorrain

French

Baroque

(inspired JMW Turner)

131
Q

“The Genius of Victory”

A

Michelangelo

Italian

Sculpture

(For the tomb of Julius II)

132
Q

“The Hay Harvest”

A

Pieter Bruegel to Elder

Flemish

Renaissance

(Part of the months series with Hunters in the Snow)

133
Q

“The Haywain Triptych”

A

Hieronymous Bosch

Dutch

Early Netherlandish Renaissance

(People getting crushed by the Haywain)

134
Q

“The Honeysuckle Bower”

A

Peter Paul Rubens

Flemish

Baroque

(Wife Isabella Brant and him seated in title thing)

135
Q

“The Kiss of Judas”

A

Giotto

Florentine

Late Gothic

(Judas kissing Jesus while another man cuts off the ear of Malchus)

136
Q

“The Lime Kiln”

A

Theodore Gericault

French

Romanticism

(showed a cart stopped next to a gray building emitting white smoke)

137
Q

“The Love Letter”

A

Jan Vermeer

Dutch

Baroque

(The content of the title object in this painting is revealed through symbols like the lute the woman in yellow is holding and the seascape hanging on the wall in the background)

(1669 painting where a curtain is pulled back to reveal a black-and-white tiled interior where two women discuss the titular correspondence.)

138
Q

“The Lovers”

A

Rene Magritte

Belgian

Surrealism

(two figures kiss with white sheets over their faces)

139
Q

“The Marriage on the Eiffel Tower”

A

Marc Chagall

Russian

Surrealism

(A man plays a violin while sitting on a large chicken as two people float by)

140
Q

“The Minute Man”

A

Daniel Chester French

American

Sculpture

(Old North Bridge in Concord)

141
Q

“The Monument”

A

london

Sir Christopher Wren

British

Architecture

(full name Monument to the Great Fire of London)

(311 steps spiral)

142
Q

“The Morse Dial covers”

A

Edward Hopper

American

Realism

(The Morse Dry Dock Dial was an in-house periodical for employees of the Morse Dry Dock and Repair Company of New York City. The company was a leading shipbuilder and refit facilities during the early 20th century.)

143
Q

“The Musical Contest”

A

Jean-Honore Fragonard

French

Rococo

(the central woman holds a yellow parasol in her left hand and a wreath in her right hand)

144
Q

“The Mystical Nativity”

A

Sandro Botticelli

Italian

Renaissance

(in reaction to Savonarola)

(twelve angels in circle, dropping crowns)

(three pairs of people and angels hugging)

(demon in bottom right)

145
Q

“The Plague at Ashdod”

A

Nicolas Poussin

French

Classicism

146
Q

“The Polish Rider”

A

Rembrandt

Dutch

Baroque

(H. W. Janson et al described how the title figure’s horse was being “urged on … by the light from the left” in this artist’s The Polish Rider.)

147
Q

“The Raising of Theophilus’ Son”

A

Masaccio

Italian

Fresco

(Right below ‘Tribute Money’)

(In the Brancacci Chapel)

148
Q

“The Return of the Prodigal Son”

A

Rembrandt

Dutch

Baroque

(a bearded man wearing a red jacket comforts the title character, who is depicted kneeling and wearing tattered clothes with his back to the viewer)

149
Q

“The Storm on the Sea of Galilee”

A

Rembrandt

Dutch

Baroque

(His only water work I think)

150
Q

“The Three Philosophers”

A

Giorgione

Italian

Renaissance

(town in background)

(man holds sheet of paper)

151
Q

‘The Tomb of Pope Clement XIII”

A

Antonio Canova

Italian

Sculpture

(contains a relief sculpture of a pyramid, into which statues enter a doorway while a cherub and lion look on)

152
Q

“The Tribe of Levi”

A

Marc Chagall

Russian

Surrealism

153
Q

The two movements of cubism

A

Analytic and Synthetic

Analytic = both radical and influential as a short but highly significant art movement between 1907 and 1911 in France

Synthetic = remained vital until around 1919, when the Surrealist movement gained popularity

154
Q

“The Verdict of the People”

A

George Caleb Bingham

American

Luminism

(politician sits dejected in the foreground)

(black man pushes wheelbarrow)

155
Q

“The Walking Man”

A

Auguste Rodin

French

Sculpture

156
Q

“Three Stages of Women”

A

Edvard Munch

Norwegian

Expressionism

157
Q

“Time Saving Truth from Envy and Discord”

A

Nicolas Poussin

French

Classicism

(shows a sickle-wielding putto and an orange-robed man with a dagger on either side of the title characters)

158
Q

“Tragic Prelude”

A

John Steuart Curry

American

Regionalism

(Showing John Brown’s arrival in the state in the 1850s)

159
Q

“Viipuri Library in Vyborg Library”

A

Alvar Aalto

Finnish-American

Architecture

160
Q

“Vision of Saint Jerome”

A

Parmigianino

Italian

Mannerism

(John the Baptist pointing upward and standing by the sleeping title saint)

161
Q

“Wurzburg Residence in Germany”

A

germany

Balthasar Neumann

German

Architecture