Entry Exam Category: College Admission Exams
Course: Accuplacer
Exam: Accuplacer Reading Sample Questions Practice Test

Practice Question

Extract

Read the passage(s) below and answer the question based on what is stated or implied in the passage(s) and in any introductory material that may be provided.
Passage
Performance is a genre in which art is presented "live," usually by the artist but sometimes with collaborators or performers. It has had a role in avant-garde art throughout the twentieth century, playing an important part in movements such as Futurism. Indeed, whenever artists have become discontented with conventional forms of art, such as painting and traditional modes of sculpture, they have often turned to performance as a means to rejuvenate their work. The most significant flourishing of performance art took place following the decline of modernism and Abstract Expressionism in the 1960s, and it found exponents across the world. Performance art of this period was particularly focused on the body, and is often referred to as Body art. This reflects the period's so-called "dematerialization of the art object, and the flight from traditional media. It also reflects the political ferment of the time: the rise of feminism, which encouraged thought about the division between the personal and political and anti-war activism, which supplied models for politicized art "actions."
Adapted from "Performance Art ©2018 by The Art Story Foundation
Which choice best characterizes the way the author presents the relationship between the arts and political and social issues?

Answer Choices

  • A: The arts are a key driver of political and social change.
  • B: The arts are a way to distract people from political and social problems.
  • C: The arts reflect changes in the political and social landscape,
  • D: The arts are stifled during times of political and social upheaval

Correct Answer: C

Rationale: The author describes how performance art mirrors social and political movements like feminism and anti-war activism, indicating a reflective relationship.

← Back to Dashboard