Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Medium

PT18 S3 P4 Q23 Explanation

Luminist Paintings

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

TopicsLocate DetailHumanities

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Passage

In the history of nineteenth-century landscape painting in the United States, the Luminists are distinguished by their focus on atmosphere and light. The accepted view of Luminist paintings is that they are basically spiritual and imply a tranquil mysticism that contrasts with earlier American artists’ concept of nature as dynamic and energetic. the onlooker toward a lucid transcendentalism, an idealized vision of the world.

What this view fails to do is to identify the true significance of this transcendental atmosphere in Luminist paintings. The prosaic factors that are revealed by a closer examination of these works suggest that the glowing appearance of nature in Luminism is actually a sign of nature’s domestication, its adaptation to human a muting of those emotions, like awe and fear, which untamed nature elicits.

One critic, in describing the spiritual quality of harbor scenes by Fitz Hugh Lane, an important Luminist, carefully notes that “at the peak of Luminist development in the 1850s and 1860s, spiritualism in America was extremely widespread.” It is also true, however, that the 1850s and 1860s were a time of trade In all of these places he painted the harbors with their ships—the instruments of expanding trade.

Lane usually depicts places like New York Harbor, with ships at anchor, but even when he depicts more remote, less commercially active harbors, nature appears pastoral and domesticated rather than primitive or unexplored. The ships, rather than the surrounding landscapes—including the sea—are generally the active element in his pictures. For Lane the justification of the atmosphere necessary for business, if also an exaggerated, idealistic rendering of that atmosphere.

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
23.

The author argues that nature is portrayed in Lane’s

Answer choices

  1. Opposite2% picked this

    wild and

    We're looking for something like - pastoral / domesticated / subdued / humbled "Wild" is the opposite of subdued and humbled. We also read that "nature appears pastoral and domesticated, rather than primitive or unexplored." So we were specifically told that nature isn't portrayed as unexplored.

  2. No Match20% picked this

    idealized and

    We're looking for something like - pastoral / domesticated / subdued / humbled "Distant" is actually close to an opposite for "domesticated". "Idealized" we could maybe stretch to convince ourselves is a synonym for the available adjectives, but it's not. We should hold out for a more direct match.

  3. Opposite, if anything3% picked this

    continually

    We're looking for something like - pastoral / domesticated / subdued / humbled "Continually changing" is closer to wild and unpredictable. That's the opposite of subdued and humbled.

  4. No Match1% picked this

    difficult to

    We're looking for something like - pastoral / domesticated / subdued / humbled "Difficult to understand" doesn't match any of those. It sounds more like "primitive and unexplored", the traits that we're told don't apply to Lane's portrayal.

  5. Correct74% picked this

    subordinate to human

    Why this is right

    We're looking for something like - pastoral / domesticated / subdued / humbled "Subordinate to human concerns" means humans are in charge, and nature is our servant / employee / pet. A wild dog is not subordinate to human commands but a domesticated dog is. An insubordinate employee breaks the rules and flouts authority. He's wild. A subordinate is subdued and humbled. The other way to think about this answer (besides using your mental thesaurus to convince yourself that this answer is our best available match for the available adjectives) is to remind yourself that the author is stressing that Lane saw nature as a tool for human activity. "The atmosphere necessary for business". The sea is a viable highway for the transport of goods. "In sum, I consider Lane's sea simply an environment for human activity".

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

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