1. Which of the following can be inferred from the passage?
We need to check each statement against the text to see if it is directly supported or logically implied.
I. Some of the most popular museum attractions are contemporary art installations.
Text Analysis: The passage states that "immediately appealing, expressive paintings" are "often the most popular museum attractions." It then contrasts these paintings with "assemblages of found objects to bizarre video installations and digital interactive experiments," which are described as "much of contemporary art."
Conclusion: The text explicitly identifies
expressive paintings as the popular attractions and contrasts them with the contemporary installations. Therefore, we cannot infer that the contemporary installations are among the most popular; in fact, the
passage implies the opposite by noting that contemporary art is often criticized as "unapproachable" and "emotionless."
Statement I is NOT inferred.
II. Expressive paintings have been considered “brainy.”
Text Analysis: The first paragraph states that the notion of gesture is a "link between the immediately appealing, expressive paintings" and the “brainy” constructivist school of art. The word "link" and the phrasing "between X and the 'brainy' Y" clearly separate the expressive paintings from the "brainy" school.
Conclusion: The passage contrasts the expressive paintings (appealing) with the constructivist school (brainy). The
paintings themselves are not called brainy.
Statement II is NOT inferred.
III. Seemingly cold and cerebral art can nevertheless make use of certain expressive tools.
Text Analysis: The first paragraph notes that much of contemporary art is "criticized as cold, unapproachable, impersonal, and emotionless." It then introduces "the notion of gesture as an expressive tool" as a link between this kind of art and the popular paintings. The author proceeds to describe di Suvero's work, which is made of "industrial-sized I-beams" (a cold material) but "resonates with an energy born... of the gestural quality of the forms."
Conclusion: The author uses the idea of "gesture" as an "expressive tool" that connects the "brainy" constructivist art (a type of cold/cerebral art) with expressive paintings. The detailed analysis of Iroquois confirms that
a sculpture made of cold, industrial materials can still use "gestural quality" to exude energy, balance, and serenity (expressive qualities).Statement III IS inferred.
Therefore, only Statement III is inferred, making C the correct answer.
2. Which of the following does the author assert about Iroquois?
We need to find direct evidence in the second paragraph for each statement regarding Mark di Suvero’s Iroquois.
I. Paradoxically, it appears to be both stable and unstable.
Text Analysis: The author explicitly states: "...one can immediately sense is terribly heavy and somewhat precarious, yet stable and balanced." Later, the author notes: "...each piece seems to threaten the viewer with its weight and size... daring the entire form to topple over. At the same time, the piece seems to exude stability, balance, even serenity."
Conclusion: The author repeatedly asserts the work's paradoxical nature of being simultaneously threatening/precarious (unstable) and balanced/serene (stable).
Statement I IS asserted.
II. It uses gesture to evoke a sense of energy.
Text Analysis: The final sentence of the passage states: "Iroquois resonates with an energy born not of the physical quality of the sculpture... but rather of the gestural quality of the forms."
Conclusion: The author
directly asserts that the sculpture's energy is a result of its gestural quality.
Statement II IS asserted.
III. Some interpret it as simpler than it really is.
Text Analysis: The paragraph notes: "...the linear forms became considerably more complex than one might presume."
Conclusion: The author is asserting that the sculpture is more complex than viewers (or "one") initially presume, meaning it is
often interpreted as simpler than its reality.Statement III IS asserted.
Since I, II, and III are all directly asserted by the author, E is the correct answer.