Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Easy

PT107 S2 P1 Q3 Explanation

Pre-World War I Painters

A free, expert breakdown of this official LSAT Reading Comprehension question.

TopicsLocate DetailHumanities

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Passage

For some years before the outbreak of World War I, a number of painters in different European countries developed works of art that some have described as prophetic: paintings that by challenging viewers’ habitual ways of perceiving the world of the present are thus said to anticipate a future world that would important break with traditions of representational art that stretched back to the Renaissance.

So fundamental is this break with tradition that it is not surprising to discover that these artists—among them Picasso and Braque in France, Kandinsky in Germany, and Malevich in Russia—are often credited with having anticipated not just subsequent developments in the arts, but also the political and social disruptions and upheavals of and not their break with traditional artistic techniques, that constitutes their chief interest and value.

No one will deny that an artist may, just as much as a writer or a politician, speculate about the future and then try to express a vision of that future through making use of a particular style or choice of imagery; speculation about the possibility of war in Europe was certainly only to the eye. The reformation of society was of no interest to them as artists.

It is also important to remember that not all decisive changes in art are quickly followed by dramatic events in the world outside art. The case of Delacroix, the nineteenth-century French painter, is revealing. His stylistic innovations startled his contemporaries—and still retain that power over modern viewers—but most art historians have decided 1830, as opposed to other artists who supposedly told of changes still to come.

What this question is testing

Locate Detail

Your task

Pin down exactly what the question asks about the passage — a detail, the author's view, the structure, or the main point — before looking at the choices.

Common trap

Answers that restate a true detail from the passage but don't answer the specific question being asked.

Winning move

Anticipate the answer in your own words from the passage, then find the choice that matches that prediction.

Reading along? Open the full official question in LawHub — we show a fragment here and keep the reasoning in our own words.

The question
3.

According to the passage, the statements of Picasso and Braque

Answer choices

  1. Out of Support Window: politics2% picked this

    they had a long-standing interest in

    No part of our Support Window deals with 'politics'. - they were primarily concerned with problems of representation and form and with efforts to create a far more "real" reality than the one that was accessible only to the eye. - As artists, they had no interest in reforming society. This answer also goes against the author's bigger point here, which is that people shouldn't be celebrating these artists as visionary sociopolitical figures.

  2. Out of Support Window: social change2% picked this

    they worked actively to bring about

    No part of our Support Window deals with 'social change'. - they were primarily concerned with problems of representation and form and with efforts to create a far more "real" reality than the one that was accessible only to the eye. - As artists, they had no interest in reforming society.

  3. Out of Support Window3% picked this

    their formal innovations were actually the result

    Out of Support Window: result of chance No part of our Support Window deals with 'being the result of chance'. If anything, their formal innovations seem exhaustively thought out. - they were primarily concerned with problems of representation and form and with efforts to create a far more "real" reality than the one that was accessible only to the eye. - As artists, they had no interest in reforming society.

  4. Correct90% picked this

    their work was a deliberate attempt to transcend

    Why this is right

    We can find a synonym match for this in our Support Window. - they were primarily concerned with problems of representation and form and with efforts to create a far more "real" reality than the one that was accessible only to the eye. - As artists, they had no interest in reforming society. This is a great illustration of the RC principle that It Pays to be Stubborn. If we're utterly convinced that we have to match our answer to these two available supporting details, then we can do the work it takes to match up synonyms here.

    Skill tested: Locate Detail · how this choice captures the passage's function is the move to repeat next time.

  5. Opposite3% picked this

    the formal aspects of their work were of little interest

    Our Support Window is saying that they were primarily concerned with the formal aspects of their work. Reforming society was of little interest to them. - they were primarily concerned with problems of representation and form and with efforts to create a far more "real" reality than the one that was accessible only to the eye. - As artists, they had no interest in reforming society.

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