All CLEP Humanities Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1 : Answering Other Questions About Classical Architecture
The ancient Egyptian pyramids were built for what purpose?
Warehouses
Palaces
Temples
Forts
Tombs
Tombs
The Great Pyramids at Giza were the largest structures in the world for almost two thousand years from their construction in roughly 2500 BCE. Remarkably, the pyramids were built for a singular, one-time purpose as the tombs of Pharaohs and their families. The Pyramids were built away from other settlements, and were intended as massive monuments to the Pharaohs' power.
Example Question #3 : Architecture
Who was the Renaissance architect whose guidebook and personal neoclassical style was widely influential during the Enlightenment?
Christopher Wren
Leonardo da Vinci
Inigo Jones
Andrea Palladio
William de Keyser
Andrea Palladio
The Italian architect Andrea Palladio was well known for his own buildings in his native Venice, but gained greater fame for the work of architectural theory he composed in 1570, The Four Books of Architecture. Drawing on Greek and Roman influences, Palladio called for symmetry, domes, columns, and grand spaces. Each of these elements would become hallmarks of neoclassical architecture during the eighteenth century.
Example Question #4 : 3 D Visual Art
Originally meant as a derogatory description, which post-Renaissance movement was characterized by ornate decoration, as seen in the palace of Versailles and in the works of Caravaggio, in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries?
Baroque
Pre-modern
Impressionism
Mannerism
Gothic
Baroque
Mannerism was mainly in the sixteenth century, and was not as strong in movement or emotion. Impressionism was a nineteenth century movement focusing on small brush strokes and an emphasis on openness and light in the overall composition. Gothic art is a Medieval art style, which came before the Renaissance. Pre-modern is not an art style. Baroque style is typically used to describe Versailles and Caravaggio.
Example Question #7 : Visual Arts
The modern architectural masterpiece Fallingwater, a residence in rural Pennsylvania, was designed by which architect?
I.M. Pei
Frank Gehry
Mies van der Rohe
Frank Lloyd Wright
Philip Johnson
Frank Lloyd Wright
Fallingwater is generally considered Frank Lloyd Wright's masterpiece, as the residence was constructed above and incorporated a waterfall. The residence, built in 1939, blended the interior and exterior of the building into Wright's perfect distillation of his "organic" philosophy of architecture. The property remained a residence for many years, but became a protected site in the mid-1960s.
Example Question #1 : Answering Other Questions About Architecture
Who was the architect famous for designing a Glass House as his own residence?
Frank Lloyd Wright
Frank Gehry
Philip Johnson
Mies van der Rohe
I. M. Pei
Philip Johnson
Philip Johnson was a modernist architect who sought clean lines, used steel and glass construction, and valued function in his design. Inspired by the Farnsworth House designed by Mies van der Rohe, Johnson designed his own house in Connecticut as made almost entirely of glass. The rectangular abode is now a tourist site, along with Johnson's entire property, including other buildings and his massive art collection.
Example Question #2 : Answering Other Questions About Modern Architecture
John Augustus Roebling is the architect responsible for which New York City landmark?
The Brooklyn Bridge
The Empire State Building
Trinity Church
The Statue of Liberty
The George Washington Bridge
The Brooklyn Bridge
John Augustus Roebling, a German immigrant, was the leading designer of bridges throughout the mid-nineteenth century in America. His masterpiece, however, was the Brooklyn Bridge, which was the first steel-wire suspension bridge ever built. Unfortunately, Roebling died in 1870, just as it was beginning construction, and his son Washington Roebling had to take over construction.
Example Question #2 : Answering Other Questions About Architecture
The unfinished Sagrada Familia cathedral in Barcelona was designed by whom?
Antoni Gaudí
Enrique Nieto
Pablo Picasso
Salvador Dalí
Joan Miró
Antoni Gaudí
La Sagrada Familia was planned as a massive church in Barcelona that would rival its Cathedral in size. After breaking ground in 1882, the church is still not totally finished. Importantly, its architect Antoni Gaudí was killed in a 1926 tram accident, and the work had to continue on under architects with different design aesthetics than its singular original designer.
Example Question #3 : Answering Other Questions About Architecture
The architect Frank Gehry is famous for designing the building for which art museum?
The Musee D'Orsay in Paris
The Los Angeles County Museum of Art in Los Angeles
The Art Institute of Chicago in Chicago
The Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao
The Museum of Modern Art in New York
The Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao
Gehry, a modernist architect well known for flowing lines and unusual shapes, has built concert halls, museums, and government buildings around the world. Among his most notable works is the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain, constructed out of titanium and glass, in shapes that are meant to evoke the countryside of Bilbao's Basque region.
Example Question #2 : Answering Other Questions About Architecture Of The Americas
Mayan architecture was dominated by what kind of building?
The onion dome
The vaulted hall
The galleried temple
The pyramid
The minaret
The pyramid
All Mayan cities and temple structures revolved around the pyramid. Typically featuring steps to the top of the pyramid and terraces, the Mayas used the pyramid for temples, palaces, and most other important buildings. The use of the pyramid was highly influential for later Mesoamerican cultures, such as the Aztecs.
Example Question #1 : Answering Other Questions About Preclassical Architecture
Hindu temple architecture is defined in the works collectively known as __________.
the Bhagavad Gita
the Rig Veda
the Shilpa Shastras
the Rhamayana
the Mahabaratha
the Shilpa Shastras
Hindu temple architecture follows guidelines which call for a circular inner sanctum with the rest of the structure emanating from the center room. As with most ancient Hindu artistic traditions, the basic structures and rules for Hindu temple architecture are found in the group of works known as the Shilpa Shastras.