Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Easy

PT146 S4 P2 Q8 Explanation

Sociohistorical Interpretations of Art

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

TopicsMeaning in ContextHumanities

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Passage

Most sociohistorical interpretations of art view a body of work as the production of a class, generally a dominant or governing class, imposing its ideals. For example, Richard Taruskin writes in his Oxford History of Western Music that one of the defining characteristics of “high art” is that “it is produced by ways that art, historically, was “produced by and for political and social elites.”

The first way was for a member of the elite to engage a well-known artist to produce something for display. For instance, if one commissions a famous architect to design one’s house, that may reflect great credit on one’s taste, even if one finds the house impossible to live in. The second life, like Raphael’s frescoes in the Vatican apartments commissioned by Pope Julius II.

Sociohistorical critics like Taruskin prefer to deal with art produced the second way, because it enables them to construct a subtle analysis of the way such art embodied the ideology of the elite, whatever the identity of the artist. For this kind of analysis to work, however, it must be the case can eliminate the possibility that artists subverted the ideals of the patron for their own reasons.

Historically, the two social classes able to commission art were the aristocratic, or governing class, and the well-to-do middle class, what used to be called the bourgeoisie. The taste of the aristocracy and the upper middle class has not always been apt to produce an art that endures. In his characterization of place in the margins of the establishment—engaged by a rich patron with eccentric tastes, for example.

Moreover, a great deal of art that went against the grain of elite values was paid for by the establishment unwillingly and with misgivings. Because some of this art endured, the sociohistorical critic, like Taruskin, must engage in an analogue of Freudian analysis, and claim that in hidden ways such art embodied those ideals are revealed by work of which they overtly disapproved.

What this question is testing

Meaning in Context

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
8.

In using the phrase “something for display” (second paragraph), the author most probably

Answer choices

  1. Out of Scope: political2% picked this

    allowed the patron to make a political statement to

    Nothing in those two sentences makes it sound like the artist was chosen as a political statement.

  2. Out of Scope: business1% picked this

    could be used to attract customers to the

    The only example we got was used to make people think their house is cool. We have no support for the idea that artists were commissioned to get people to come to a store.

  3. Correct90% picked this

    was meant to create an impression that reflected positively on

    Why this is right

    Cool, by association. That's what we were looking for. This matches up well with the example, in which a rich person pays a famous architect to design their house, so that it may reflect great credit on their taste.

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

  4. Out of Scope2% picked this

    was representative of the artist’s broader body of work at

    Out of Scope: representative of the artist's work Nothing in those sentences makes it sound like rich people specifically wanted representative pieces of art. They just wanted the well-known name attached, from what we've read. That sink is a Picasso, whether or not it's representative of Picasso's broader body of work or just a new direction he was tinkering with.

  5. Less Supportable: personal satisfaction6% picked this

    provided the patron with personal

    Although we can probably infer that indirectly patron derived personal satisfaction, it wasn't from the art itself, but rather from how impressed their rich friends would be that Picasso designed the bathroom sink.

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