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Can you please share explanations for Q1, 5 & 7?
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Can you please share explanations for Q1, 5 & 7?

Explanation

1. Which one of the following most accurately expresses the main point of the passage?

Explanation

Use your Bottom Line of the passage to help you to evaluate the choices. The correct answer will describe the main idea of the passage.

A. No. While this is mentioned in the passage, it is too narrow and is not the overall main idea.

B. Yes. This answer accurately paraphrases the Bottom Line.

C. No. The passage makes no such comparison.

D. No. While this is mentioned in the passage, it is too narrow and is not the overall main idea.

E. No. While this is mentioned in the passage, it is too narrow and is not the overall main idea.

Answer: B
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Can you please share explanations for Q1, 5 & 7?

Explanation

5. The passage suggests that Taruskin's position commits him to which one of the following views?

Explanation

The question is asking for a statement that follows from Taruskin’s position as it is described by the passage. The correct answer will be supported by evidence from the passage.

A. No. Matthew Arnold makes an argument about more talented artists, but Taruskin does not.

B. No. Taruskin does not mention contemporary artists.

C. Yes. In the first paragraph, Taruskin states that a defining attribute of high art is that it’s produced by and for elites, and in the fifth paragraph, the author argues that Taruskin must claim that art that overtly goes against the grain of elite values actually embodies those ideals in hidden ways.

D. No. The passage does not compare artists who are members of the elites to those who are commissioned by elites.

E. No. Matthew Arnold makes an argument about more talented artists, but Taruskin does not.

Answer: C
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Can you please share explanations for Q1, 5 & 7?

Explanation

7. The author mentions "Raphael's frescoes in the Vatican apartments" (lines 18-19) for which one of the following reasons?

Explanation

The question is asking why the author mentions “Raphael’s frescoes in the Vatican apartments.” In the second paragraph, the frescoes are introduced as an example of a work that expressed and mirrored one’s ideals and way of life.

A. Yes. This accurately paraphrases the discussion in thesecond paragraph.

B. No. While the frescoes are in the Vatican, the passage does not discuss the influence of religion.

C. No. This answer choice is extreme and is unsupported. While the passage says that sociohistorical interpreters prefer to analyze this type of relationship, the passage does not argue that it is the most common type of relationship.

D. No. An artist subverting the ideals of a patron is not mentioned until the third paragraph.

E. No. The frescoes are mentioned as an example of the relationship that is preferred by sociohistorical critics.

Answer: A
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Really a beautiful one.
Below is the passage overview by a Manhattan instructor:


First clue about Purpose:
"MOST interpretations view a body of work as ______"

Normally an author says something is USUALLY, TYPICALLY thought of a certain way because she's planning to push back against that way of thinking.

Sure enough, we get the author's voice in 7-10, with the classic "but/yet/however/recently" turning point.

PURPOSE: Clarify a misconception / Make a Distinction

P1: Background claim and author's focus

Most sociohist. interps of art = dominant, governing class imposes its ideals.

Author = we need to distinguish two different ways in which art was produced by and for the dominant, governing class.

P2: The two different ways

Way 1 = Elite person pays an artist to make something just because owning that artist's work gives the elite person some cool popularity points.

Way 2 = Elite person pays an artist to make something because he wants the artist to create a work that reflects the elite's ideals and way of life.

(I would pause there to reflect on how those are distinct. They seem similar. Essentially, the first way just allows a rich person to brag "Look -- I own something Picasso made". The second way allows a rich person to brag "Look --- Picasso made me something that is totally ME.")

P3: Critics usually focus on the 2nd way

Author's push back = who says the rich person even HAS enough personality or ideals for an artist to try to express? Who says we can look at a piece of art and say "that art reflects the elite person who paid for it". Maybe the artist took the money and made a piece of art SHE wanted to make, and the art really reflects HER ideals, not the elite's.

P4: Author expands on why he thinks focusing on the 2nd way is troubling

It's unlikely that mainstream rich people (who were lame and obsessed with stupid things like fox hunting and reputation) had good enough taste to have specifically requested the great art we see from that era. It's more likely that talented artists just got funding from weird rich people, who were willing to let these artists be creative.

P5: Author continues expanding on why 2nd way is unlikely to be right

A lot of great art was the result of an artist getting money from a rich person, but then creating a piece of art that specifically went AGAINST the elite (maybe even against that specific person).

If artists frequently made sarcastic pieces of art that were critical of the elite or went against the tastes of the elite, then critics like Taruskin are pretty foolish when it comes to their habit of looking at a piece of art, seeing what part of the elite paid for that art, and then leaping to the assumption that the piece of art reflects the tastes of the elite that paid for it.

=========

The passage is essentially this:
When we look at a piece of art, does it tell us about the artist or about the person who paid the artist to make the work?

Critics usually assume that the piece of art tells us about the person who paid the artist. The critics assume that the art turned out the way the buyer requested/wanted.

This author is saying: That's crazy!

1st - this great art we're talking about involves refined taste and bold artistic visions. Meanwhile, the rich people paying the artist did not have refined taste or bold vision.

2nd - A bunch of times, a rich person would pay an artist to make something, and the artist would come back with something the rich person hated. (paid for unwillingly / paid with misgivings / overtly disapproved)

The confusing Freudian line is saying, "If the rich person hated this piece of art he paid for, and some stupid critic is still maintaining that this piece of art reflects the ideals and vision of the rich person, then the critic must be saying something ridiculous like 'the rich person didn't consciously know that he wanted this controversial piece of art, but some part of his Freudian subconscious knew it wanted this piece of art.'"
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Could experts please shed some light on this one? Q1,5,6.
@MartyMurray @KarishmaB @GMATNinja
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Could experts please shed some light on this one? Q1,5,6.
@MartyMurray @KarishmaB @GMATNinja
I'll help you tackle these three questions by first mapping the passage structure, then addressing each question systematically.

Passage Structure Map

Paragraph 1: Introduces the debate - Taruskin claims "high art" is produced by/for elites, BUT there are actually TWO different ways this happens (key distinction!)
Paragraph 2: Explains the two ways:
  • Way 1: Elite hires famous artist for prestige (like commissioning a famous architect)
  • Way 2: Create work that mirrors elite's ideals (like Raphael's Vatican frescoes)
Paragraph 3: Critics prefer Way 2 because it lets them analyze elite ideology BUT this requires:
  • Elite had recognizable identity/consensus
  • Artists didn't subvert patron's ideals
Paragraph 4: Problem - Elite taste (aristocracy="Barbarians", middle class="Philistines") often didn't produce enduring art
Paragraph 5: Major complication - Much enduring art actually went against elite values, forcing critics to claim it "secretly" embodied elite ideals

Question 1: Main Point

The passage's central argument is that sociohistorical interpretations are problematic because:
  • They oversimplify how art was produced for elites
  • Elite taste often failed to produce enduring art
  • Much great art actually opposed elite values
  • Critics must perform mental gymnastics to maintain their theory

Answer: (B)
- Sociohistorical interpretations are overly simplistic

Why others are wrong:

  • (A) - Only partial; misses the critical analysis aspect
  • (C) - Too narrow; focuses only on reputation
  • (D) - This is a consequence, not the main point
  • (E) - Just a detail from Para 1-2, not the main argument

Question 5: Taruskin's Position

Taruskin believes high art = produced by/for elites. The passage's final paragraph reveals the logical bind: when enduring art opposed elite values, critics like Taruskin must claim it "secretly" supported them anyway.

Answer: (C)
- If high art endures but appears to undermine elite ideology, it must actually support it somehow

Why others are wrong:

  • (A) & (E) - Contradict Taruskin's position
  • (B) - About today's artists; passage discusses historical art
  • (D) - About artist's class background; not discussed

Question 6: Third Paragraph Function


Paragraph 3 explicitly states what must be true for sociohistorical analysis to work: "For this kind of analysis to work, however, it must be the case that..."
This paragraph identifies the assumptions underlying the sociohistorical approach mentioned in Paragraph 1.

Answer: (B) - Identifies assumptions of the analysis type from Paragraph 1

Why others are wrong:

  • (A) - Doesn't reject anything; states requirements
  • (C) - Doesn't weaken Para 2; explains prerequisites
  • (D) - Doesn't provide evidence; states conditions
  • (E) - Doesn't draw conclusions; lists assumptions

Key Strategy Tips:


  1. Track "pivot words": "however," "but," "moreover" signal important shifts
  2. Identify the author's stance: Here, the author is critical of sociohistorical interpretations
  3. Watch for structural indicators: "The first way..." "The second way..." help you map the argument
  4. Main point questions: Look for what the author is arguing against or critiquing
  5. Function questions: Focus on transition words and how paragraphs connect

The passage essentially shows how sociohistorical critics oversimplify the relationship between art and elite ideology, forcing them into increasingly strained interpretations to maintain their theory.
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