Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Easy

PT125 S3 P2 Q13 Explanation

Roy Lichtenstein

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

TopicsPrimary PurposeHumanities

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Passage

The painter Roy Lichtenstein helped to define pop art—the movement that incorporated commonplace objects and commercial-art techniques into paintings—by paraphrasing the style of comic books in his work. His merger of a popular genre with the forms and intentions of fine art generated a complex result: while poking fun at the pretensions a seriousness of theme that enabled it to transcend mere parody.

That Lichtenstein’s images were fine art was at first difficult to see, because, with their word balloons and highly stylized figures, they looked like nothing more than the comic book panels from which they were copied. Standard art history holds that pop art emerged as an impersonal alternative to the histrionics of against the fading emotional power of abstract expressionism, rather than an aloof attempt to ignore it.

But if rebellion against previous art by means of the careful imitation of a popular genre were all that characterized Lichtenstein’s work, it would possess only the reflective power that parodies have in relation to their subjects. Beneath its cartoonish methods, his work displayed an impulse toward realism, an urge to say faith in reconciliation, not only between cartoons and fine art, but between parody and true feeling.

What this question is testing

Primary Purpose

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
13.

The primary purpose of the passage is most

Answer choices

  1. Too Tentative8% picked this

    express curiosity about an artist’s

    Expressing curiosity makes it sound like the author has just dipped her toes in the water of Lichtenstein and is intrigued, hoping to see more. Lichtenstein is done, though. Possibly dead. The author is summarizing L's legacy and giving a more resounding testimonial in favor of his work than mere "curiosity".

  2. Correct82% picked this

    clarify the motivation behind an artist’s

    Why this is right

    The author is trying to clarify a couple potential misconceptions about Lichtenstein: - his world of pop art wasn't an impersonal alternative to abstract expressionism (they actually liked early expressionism). It was just a rebellion against the lack of emotional power held by late abstract expressionism. - his use of consumer culture was not mere parody. He was not a cynic or jaded. He really wanted to say something positive that modern art should include obvious symbols from modern life, and he imbued these with a naive sweetness (not a jaded cynicism). While none of us would have picked "clarify the motivation" if we were writing our own correct answer, we can make this work.

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

  3. Weak Match1% picked this

    contrast two opposing theories about an

    We might fight for the viability of this answer, thinking, "aren't their kind of two different opposing views?" The correct answer talks about two opposing views as well: 1. the Misconception (that L was just parody, that he wanted an impersonal alternative to abstract expressionism, that he's a jaded cynic about consumer culture) 2. the Reality (his work transcended parody, he actually was fine with early emotionally-powerful abstract expressionism, he genuinely liked consumer culture) Calling these two views "two opposing theories" makes it sound as though the author is presenting two theories that belong to other people, not to the author. Meanwhile, if an author is clarifying something, then the two views are the Misconception vs. the Author's View. This passage is heavy on author's voice, so we don't want a purpose that sounds detached, like "here are these two opposing views that are out there. let me compare and contrast them."

  4. Weak Match: evolution7% picked this

    describe the evolution of an artist’s

    While highlighting the evolution or development stages of an artist's career is a common purpose for Humanities + Highlight Noteworthy passages, this passage didn't trace different phases of Lichtenstein's work. The author's two big topics were 1. Lich wasn't rebelling against expressionism writ large, just against the emotion-less late expressionism. 2. Lich's inclusion of consumer culture wasn't just parody. It was earnest, nostalgic, and sweet. Neither of those speaks to different phases of an artist's career.

  5. Opposite2% picked this

    refute a previous overestimation of an

    This passage is very positive! This answer is not. If we're estimating how much a watch costs and you guess $20k, you committed an overestimation. If I rebuke your estimate and say, "no way, it's way lower", then I'm refuting your previous overestimation. If the author were refuting an overestimation, she'd be saying, "You previous art reviewers really overestimated Lichtenstein's work. Let me refute you. His work is worth much less than that."

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