Mark Rothko’s Blue, Orange, Red is different from Willem de Kooning’s Woman and Bicycle because it __________.
a. uses large areas of color to evoke moods, such as joy and despair
b. conveys personal expression through spontaneous brushstrokes
c. has neither personal expression nor symbolic content
d. demonstrates the influence of commercial art in the postwar period
a. uses large areas of color to evoke moods, such as joy and despair
You might also like to view...
Which jazz style has no familiar chord changes, no references to popular songs, and no steady beat?
A. free jazz. B. bebop. C. cool jazz. D. third stream.
Which of the following was NOT a 20th-century English composer?
A) Gustav Holst B) Francis Poulenc C) Benjamin Britten D) Ralph Vaughan Williams
Futurist performance
A. seamlessly incorporated video projections with the actors' live bodies on stage. B. was a type of documentary theatre. C. emphasized the illogical and rejected a narrative based on cause and effect. D. promoted theatre of realism and psychology.
A part of a melody is called a ________. It can be sung on one breath and ends at a point of full or partial rest.
A. cadence B. phrase C. sequence D. step