Học tại trường Chưa có thông tin
Đến từ Thái Bình , Chưa có thông tin
Số lượng câu hỏi 17
Số lượng câu trả lời 2
Điểm GP 0
Điểm SP 0

Người theo dõi (3)

Cute Boy
Pham Thi Nhung

Đang theo dõi (0)


Read the following passage and mark the letter on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer

Before photography was invented in 1839, painted portraits, and engravings based on them, were one of the few ways to record likenesses. From the Colonial era through the 1820s, portraiture was the most widely practiced genre of American art, and it continued to be a significant form through the 19th century. The demand for likenesses was incessant, and portraiture was often the primary source of income for artists. Artists frequently made portraits of famous people to attract interest and potential patrons. For example, in 1834 Chester Harding painted frontiersman Davy Crockett, then a member of the U.S. House of Representatives, for display in his Boston gallery.

A consistent belief through most of the 18th and 19th centuries was that character could be read from a person's face, or the bumps on his or her head, or from facial expressions, and that portraits should convey these indicators of character. These theories of physiognomy and phrenology have since been debunked, but they were important considerations in depicting the nation's leaders, since such portraits were often made for posterity. Most people had only one portrait painted in their lifetime, if at all, so artists were selected with great care, and expectations were high.

Before the 1840s, American portraiture was influenced primarily by English techniques, poses, compositions and gestures, and many artists received at least part of their training in England. Even canvas sizes followed the British example. Portraits made on commission were priced according to canvas size and the materials and labor involved.

In the late 19th century as European portraitists began traveling to the United States to acquire commissions from the growing upper class, American artists increasingly felt they needed to train abroad in order to succeed at home. Paris continued to be the main lure. as painters such as Eakins, Whistler, Beaux and Sargent went to study there. Some of America's best-known portraitists, in fact, became expatriates.

Despite the stage and screen portrayals of her, Cleopatra was not actually breaktakingly beautiful. 

A. Cleopatra was as beautiful as she has always been portrayed in films and plays. 

B. It is the way she has been portrayed on stage and screen that has given us our image of Cleopatra. 

C. Cleopatra will be remembered as the most beautiful woman in the world because of the films and plays about her. 

D. In spite of the way she is depicted in films and plays, Cleopatra was not really wildly attractive.