The final exam will cover chapters 15-25 and this is how it will be constructed:
20 vocabulary terms (match the term to its definition) worth 1 point each.
40 multiple choice questions worth 1 point each
2 essays focussing on conversations we've had in class (The 3 Davids and Titian vs. Manet) worth 15 points each.
1 essay focussing on
a new artwork you have not seen before in this class worth 10 points.
The 20 vocabulary terms will be pulled directly from the "Terms Of The Day" lists I have given you at the beginning of every class period. Study these lists well enough to be able to match each term on the left side of the page with its particular definition on the right side of the page, just like the mid-term.
The 40 multiple choice questions come from both the class lectures and from the book. There will be a few questions on the test that we never addressed in class; they come directly from the book. However, for brevity's sake, and to give you less to study, I WILL NOT give any questions from chapters that we did not cover in class at all. The exam questions will range from those that test how well you understand the definitions of terms to questions about specific artworks that you have seen, to questions about the artists themselves.
Let me give you two example questions (yes, these will be on the test just as you see them here):
Pablo Picasso's oil painting entitled
Portrait of Ambroise Vollard is an example of which modern movement in art?
A. Impressionism
B. Surrealism
C. Cubism
D. Pop Art
During the late 16th century, the Catholic church launched a series of internal reforms, which spawned much of the Baroque period of art. These internal reforms were collectively called:
A. Reformation
B. Counter Reformation
C. Confucianism
D. Rococo
The best advice I can give you on how to study for this portion of the exam is to comb through all your notes you've taken in class, remind yourself of all the main concepts you've learned, familiarize yourself with all the "Terms Of The Day," and to make sure you have read the material in the book. Pay special attention to how each artwork serves as an example to illustrate a concept (in other words, Monet's painting is an example of Impressionism, David was a painter of the Neoclassical era). Don't just depend on what I have told you in class. Yes, 90% of these questions will come directly from lecture. But you don't want to be thrown off by the questions that are based on the book alone.
The two essay topics focussing on conversations we had in class will be phrased as follows (again, yes, I'm telling you exactly what will be on the test):
1. Compare and contrast the three sculptures, all titled David, by Donatello, Michelangelo, and Bernini. What do these works have in common? How do they differ from one another? What does each sculpture tell us about the place and time period in which it was created?
2. Compare and contrast Titian’s painting Venus Of Urbino and Manet’s painting Olympia. What do these works have in common? How do they differ from one another? What does each sculpture tell us about the artist’s opinion of what role art should play in society?There will be a printed reproduction of each painting in the exam for you to look at while working on the essays.
The best way to study for these essays is to look at the images themselves (they can all be found on this blog
HERE and
HERE) and think back to those group conversations about them. (We will have our conversation about Titian and Manet when we get back from Thanksgiving Break.) Click
HERE for a very concise compare-and-contrast of the 3 Davids on WikiAnswers. Click
HERE for an article about Titian and Manet's paintings and how they portray the roles of women. That doesn't
exactly answer the essay question, but the article points out some interesting differences.
The final essay topic will focus on a printed reproduction of a work of art you have not seen in this class yet and it will be phrased like this:
Y
ou have not seen the above artwork in this class thus far. Write a response to the work that takes into account what you have learned about art this semester. Don’t just describe what you see. Bring this work into conversation with the concepts you have been studying. What kind of art is this? In which art historical period do you think this work was made? What might the work tell us about the time period in which the artist lived, or the artist him/herself? Do you see any iconography, symbols, or choices of the artist that point to the work's content/meaning? Etc., etc.This is meant to test how well you have been paying attention to the concepts you've been learning in this class. If you understand these topics and concepts well enough to apply them to a work you have not seen before, then you have made good use of your semester. Try practicing on the two images below (no, these will not be on the exam). Think about the wording of the essay topic above and consider what you might write about each of these works:
Study hard, and good luck to everyone. If you have taken good notes, if you have read the chapters, and if you have spent some time really trying to understand the "Terms Of The Day" then this exam shouldn't be difficult for you.