Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Hard

PT145 S3 P2 Q12 Explanation

Art Forgeries

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

TopicsInferenceHumanities

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Passage

It is commonly assumed that even if some forgeries have aesthetic merit, no forgery has as much as an original by the imitated artist would. Yet even the most prominent art specialists can be duped by a talented artist turned forger into mistaking an almost perfect forgery for an original. For instance, reputed critic who persisted in believing it to be a Vermeer even after van Meegeren’s confession.

Given the experts’ initial enthusiasm, some philosophers argue that van Meegeren’s painting must have possessed aesthetic characteristics that, in a Vermeer original, would have justified the critics’ plaudits. Van Meegeren’s Emmaus thus raises difficult questions regarding the status of superbly executed forgeries. Is a forgery inherently inferior as art? How are we forgery? Philosopher of art Alfred Lessing proposes convincing answers to these questions.

A forged work is indeed inferior as art, Lessing argues, but not because of a shortfall in aesthetic qualities strictly defined, that is to say, in the qualities perceptible on the picture’s surface. For example, in its composition, its technique, and its brilliant use of color, van Meegeren’s work is flawless, even techniques for embodying this new way of seeing through distinctive treatment of light, color, and form.

Even if we grant that van Meegeren, with his undoubted mastery of Vermeer’s innovative techniques, produced an aesthetically superior painting, he did so about three centuries after Vermeer developed the techniques in question. Whereas Vermeer’s origination of these techniques in the seventeenth century represents a truly impressive and historic achievement, van Meegeren’s all its aesthetic merits, lacks the historical significance that makes Vermeer’s work artistically great.

What this question is testing

Inference

Your task

Find what must be true based on what the passage or stimulus states.

Common trap

Answers that are plausible or likely but not actually guaranteed by the text.

Winning move

Keep only the choice the statements fully support — eliminate anything that requires an extra assumption.

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

The question
12.

The passage most strongly supports which one of the

Answer choices

  1. Out of Scope14% picked this

    In any historical period, the criteria by which a work is classified as a forgery can be a

    The passage is about how a forgery is judged, not what determines whether a work of art is indeed a forgery.

  2. Out of Scope7% picked this

    An artist who uses techniques that others have developed is most

    The passage is about how a forgery is judged, not what determines whether a work of art is indeed a forgery.

  3. Unsupported7% picked this

    A successful forger must originate a new

    The passage states that great art must originate a new artistic vision, but not does not say that a successful forger must do the same.

  4. Unsupported Comparison10% picked this

    Works of art created early in the career of a great artist are more likely than those created

    The passage does not compare the artworks created early in the career of an artist with those created late in the artist's career.

  5. Correct62% picked this

    A painting can be a forgery even if it is not a copy of a particular

    Why this is right

    The work by van Meegeren was not a copy of a particular original work of art. Van Meegren forged Vermeer's signature (first paragraph), not one of Vermeer's works of art.

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

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