Solution Manual for Contemporary Financial Management, 14th Edition
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CHAPTER nineTEEN
Fifteenth-century Art in Northern
Europe
19
Multiple Choice
1. For most of the fifteenth century, the __________ were the most powerful rulers and
art patrons in northern Europe.
A. dukes of Normandy
B. earls of Hampden
C. dukes of Windsor
D. dukes of Burgundy
Answer: D
Page reference: 564
2. An altarpiece which has multiple, movable wings, attached to the altarโs central,
stationary section is known as a __________.
A. diptych
B. triptych
C. predella
D. polyptych
Answer: D
Page reference: 566
3 What do art historians mean by the use of โhidden symbolsโ in the Mรฉrode Altarpiece
(Fig. 19-10, Fig. 19-11)?
A. secret meanings in the work that only the patron would know
B. symbols obscured by extraneous details
C. ordinary objects that also possess symbolic meaning
D. symbolic meaning that has been lost over the years
Answer: C
Page reference: 573
4. A contemporary of Robert Campin, __________, was a painter of renown in the court
of Philip the Good.
A. Jan van Eyck
B. Hugo van der Goes
C. Master Theodoric
D. the Mary of Burgundy painter
Answer: A
Page reference: 575
5. One of the techniques used by printmakers during the fifteenth century was the
__________.
A. woodcut
B. fresco secco
C. sinopia
D. giornata
Answer: A
Page reference: 591
6. Although no signed paintings by Rogier van der Weyden exist, art historians use a
painting of the ___________________to establish the characteristics of his art.
A. Annunciation
B. Deposition
C. Last Judgment
D. Virgin and Child
Answer: B
Page reference: 576
7. Engraving on metal requires a technique called __________ in which the lines are
cut into the metal plate with sharp tools.
A. gouging
B. intaglio
C. sinopia
D. giornata
Answer: B
Page reference: 592
8. _________ belonged to the second-generation of Flemish painters.
A. Jan van Eyck
B. Robert Campin
C. Petrus Christus
D. Roger van der Weyden
Answer: C
Page reference: 582
9. According to the text, the second generation of Flemish painters was largely
responsible for ______________________.
A. the development of a standard fee structure for artistic commissions
B. the rapid spread of the Flemish style through Europe
C. the introduction of oil paint in Italy
D. a shift to more complex compositions
Answer: B
Page reference: 582
10. The German artist, __________, was a skilled printmaker as well as painter.
A. Martin Schongauer
B. Hans Memling
C. Dirck Bouts
D. Petrus Christus
Answer: A
Page reference: 591
11. Philip the Bold commissioned __________ to paint the altarpiece for the Chartreuse
de Champmol.
A. Melchior Broederlam
B. Jean Limbourg
C. Hubert van Eyck
D. Robert Campin
Answer: A
Page reference: 564-565
12. The __________ is a mythical, horse-like animal, with cloven hooves, a goatโs
beard and a single, long twisted horn.
A. unicorn
B. griffin
C. sphinx
D. centaur
Answer: A
Page reference: 572
13. Which of the following is characteristic of the International Gothic style in late
fourteenth-century Europe?
A. a preference for grisaille and pale colors
B. a microscopic detailed rendering of natural objects
C. the use of scientific perspective
D. dark simple costumes that make facial details stand out
Answer: B
Page reference: 564
14. What element of Claus Sluterโs Well of Moses (Fig. 19-3) signaled a break with the
International Gothic style?
A. the unpainted stone
B. the detailed naturalism
C. the individualized figures
D. all of the above
Answer: C
Page reference: 567
15. One reason for the limited number of female artists in the Middle Ages and the
Renaissance was that women__________________.
A. were not allowed to learn skills of drawing or painting
B. could not work professionally as artists
C. were not allowed formal apprenticeships
D. were not admitted to guilds
Answer: C
Page reference: 568
16. The distinctive character of Claus Sluterโs sculpture can still be seen in the surviving
parts of his monumental __________.
A. Unicorn Fountain
B. Well of Moses
C. Jacobโs Ladder
D. Isenheim Altarpiece
Answer: B
Page reference: 566-567
17. Of all the dukes of Burgundy, it was __________, who was the most enthusiastic art
collector and lover of books.
A. Jean, duke of Berry
B. Henri, duke of Cornwall
C. Martin, duke of Poitiers
D. Richard, duke of Vichy
Answer: A
Page reference: 568
18. How did the artists visually distinguish the duke of Berry in the illustration for the
calendar page for January in the Trรจs Riches Heures (Fig. 19-6)?
A. hieratic scale
B. a written inscription above him
C. the banner with heraldic arms above him
D. positioning him in the center of the composition
Answer: C
Page reference: 570
19. The __________ is one of the most well-known surviving tapestry series.
A. Marriage at Cana
B. Woman at the Well
C. Flight from Egypt
D. Hunt of the Unicorn
Answer: D
Page reference: 571
20. Fifteenth-century __________ painters perfected the technique of painting with an
oil medium.
A. Italian
B. Flemish
C. English
D. Portuguese
Answer: B
Page reference: 573
21. Among the finest Netherlandish illuminators of the early fifteenth century were
__________.
A. the Limbourg brothers
B. the Rohan Master and workshop
C. the Master of Champol and workshop
D. Nicholas of Verdun and workshop
Answer: A
Page reference: 568
22. The major work of the Limbourg brothers was __________ commissioned for Jean,
the Duke of Berry.
A. the Ghent Altarpiece
B. the Tres Riches Heures (Very Sumptuous Book of Hours)
C. the Merode Altarpiece
D. the Portinari Altarpiece
Answer: B
Page reference: 568
23. The richest kind of __________ was made almost entirely of silk and gold.
A. tapestry
B. manuscript
C. painting
D. porcelain
Answer: A
Page reference: 570-571
24. How does Martin Schongauerโs intensify the moment portrayed in his Demons
Tormenting St. Anthony (Fig. 19-28)?
A. placing the action in a panoramic landscape
B. condensing the action into a swirling vortex of figures
C. arranging the figures into a pyramidal shape
D. none of the above
Answer: B
Page reference: 591-592
25. In France, the leading court artist of the fifteenth century was __________.
A. Jan van Eyck
B. Jean Fouquet
C. Rogier van der Weyden
D. Hugo van der Goes
Answer: B
Page reference: 586
26. The Unicorn is Found at the Fountain (Fig. 19-8) is evidence of the intricate details,
subtle modeling, and tonal variations that are possible in ____________.
A. manuscript illumination
B. engraving
C. woven textiles
D. oil painting
Answer: C
Page reference: 571-572
27. What symbolic meaning is NOT suggested in Hunt of the Unicorn series of
tapestries?
A. the Incarnation of Christ
B. moral character and bravery
C. romantic love
D. Christโs death on the cross
Answer: B
Page reference: 572
28. The common household objects in the Annunciation of the Mรฉrode Altarpiece are
________________.
A. symbolic in meaning
B. typical of Italian households
C. clumsily rendered
D. representative of the International Gothic style
Answer: A
Page reference: 573
29. The Trรจs Riches Heures depicts peasants ______________________.
A. realistically, through the inclusion of anecdotal details
B. as happily working or amusingly uncouth
C. as crude and uncivilized
D. as servants to the upper classes
Answer: B
Page reference: 569
30. What do scholars know for certain about Jan van Eyckโs Double Portrait of A
Giovanni Arnolfini and his Wife (Fig. 19-1)?
A. the work celebrates the coupleโs wedding
B. the couple was quite wealthy
C. the coupleโs identity
D. the painting originally hung in the coupleโs home
Answer: B
Page reference: 563
31. How does the manuscript page Mary at Her Devotions from the Hours of Mary of
Burgundy (Fig. 19-7) reflect religious practice of the period?
A. It highlights her close relationship with the priest.
B. The church setting underscores her regular attendance at Mass.
C. Her spiritual vision comes through private meditation.
D. The light through the widow symbolizes Godโs presence.
Answer: C
Page reference: 570
32. What detail of the Mรฉrode Altarpiece indicates that the scene of the Annunciation is
a religious vision of the donors?
A. the enclosed garden
B. the opened door to the other room
C. the mousetrap
D. the turned pages of Maryโs book
Answer: B
Page reference: 574
33. Jan van Eyck describes the physical appearance of the Man in a Red Turban with
detailed renderings of ________________.
A. his blood shot eyes
B. tiny wrinkles around his eyes
C. showing the stubble of his beard
D. all of the above
Answer: D
Page reference: 575-576
34. How did the use of oil paint contribute to Flemish artistsโ ability to create varied
surface textures in paintings?
A. It reflects light.
B. It dries slowly.
C. It is applied in thin layers.
D. All of the above.
Answer: D
Page reference: 573
35. What detail is NOT included in the mirror on the back wall of Jan van Eyckโs Double
Portrait of A Giovanni Arnolfini and His Wife (Fig. 19-13)?
A. the backs of the couple
B. two frontal figures
C. scenes from the life of Christ
D. a donor portrait
Answer: D
Page reference: 576
36. The printing technique of engraving probably derived from workers in what trade?
A. stained glass
B. goldsmithing
C. potters
D. sculptors
Answer: B
Page reference: 591
37. Based on the textโs discussion, what art form did women of the fourteenth and
fifteenth centuries produce?
A. engraving
B. manuscript illumination
C. sculpture
D. all of the above
Answer: B
Page reference: 568
38. Where do the donorsโ portraits appear in Jan and Hubert van Eyckโs Ghent
Altarpiece?
A. in the semi-circular areas at the top of closed shutters
B. they were depicted Adam and Even on the outer wings of the opened doors
C. in the outer compartments of the lower section of the closed shutters
D. in the outer compartments of the lower section of the interior with the people
before the lamb of God
Answer: C
Page reference: 578
39. How does Rogier van der Weydenโs use of space heighten the emotional impact of
his Deposition altarpiece (Fig. 19-13)?
A. The use of deep illusionistic space makes the scene seem more realistic.
B. The full-sized figures seem to press forward into the viewerโs space.
C. He used multiple perspectives so viewers could see all the figures.
D. His use of atmospheric perspective draws the viewer into the image.
Answer: B
Page reference: 580
40. Which naturalistic device did Hugo van der Goes use in the Portinari Altarpiece (Fig.
19-19)?
A. a gold leaf background
B. a vision of Christ as Judge
C. atmospheric perspective in the landscape
D. None of the above.
Answer: C
Page reference: 582-584
41. Which of the following was NOT a reason that the Flemish style of art became
popular outside Flanders?
A. Flemish artists worked in foreign courts.
B. Artists from abroad traveled to Flanders to study.
C. The influence of the Flemish court was powerful.
D. Flemish paintings were exported abroad.
Answer: D
Page reference: 585
42. Which feature is characteristic of French painting in the fifteenth century?
A. elaborate details and complex iconography
B. a reserved detachment among the figures
C. an emphasis on symmetry and geometric patterns
D. the use of Gothic architectural settings
Answer: B
Page reference: 587
43. Patrons in Germanic lands preferred altarpieces that featured_______________.
A. groups of panel paintings similar to those of Flemish masters
B. other worldly images evoking Christian mysticism and spiritual revelation
C. polychromed wood sculpture and carvings
D. an icon of the Virgin and Child
Answer: C
Page reference: 589
44. Before the fifteenth century, printed images from woodblocks _____________.
A. did not exist
B. were sold as souvenirs for pilgrims
C. were used as designs on cloth
D. were considered a lower-class art form
Answer: C
Page reference: 591
45. Which figure does NOT exemplify the exacting naturalism that characterizes
Flemish portraiture of the fifteenth century?
A. the woman in Jan van Eyckโs Double Portrait of A Giovanni Arnolfini and His Wife
(Fig. 19-1)
B. the figure in Jan van Eyckโs Man in a Red Turban (Fig. 19-12)
C. the Virgin in Dieric Boutsโs Virgin and Child (Fig. 19-18)
D. the donor in the Mรฉrode Altarpiece by the Master of Flรฉmalle (Fig. 19-10)
Answer: A
Page reference: 563
46. How does an engraving differ from a woodcut?
A. The artist must cut the image into the metal plate.
B. The artist must cut away the excess metal surrounding the image to be printed.
C. Tonal gradations are made by varying the thickness and density of printed lines.
D. A press must be used to transfer the image onto paper.
Answer: A
Page reference: 592
47. __________ carved and gilded the elaborate altarpiece for the church at the
Champmol monastery.
A. Michael Pacher
B. Jacques de Baerze
C. Claus Sluter
D. Konrad Witz
Answer: B
Page reference: 565
48. The __________ in a Christian church symbolizes both the table of Jesusโs Last
Supper and the tombs of Christ and the saints.
A. door
B. nave
C. altar
D. clerestory
Answer: C
Page reference: 566
49. Flemish painters used an __________ to convey the illusion of forms becoming
smaller and closer together as they recede in the distance.
A. symbolism
B. intaglio
C. hierarchy
D. intuitive perspective
Answer: D
Page reference: 564
50. The earliest printed books were __________ books.
A. intaglio
B. engraving
C. block
D. textile
Answer: C
Page reference: 592
51. At the death of the sculptor, Jean de Marville, the sculptor __________ succeeded
him as overseer for the decoration of the monastery at Champmol.
A. Claus Sluter
B. Hugo van der Goes
C. Limbourg Brothers
D. Jean Fouquet
Answer: A
Page reference: 566
52. __________ emerged in Europe at the end of the fourteenth century with the
development of printing presses and the wider availability of paper.
A. Oil painting
B. Printmaking
C. Manuscript Illumination
D. Fresco
Answer: B
Page reference: 591
53. The __________ reflects the popularity of the Flamboyant style for secular
architecture.
A. House of Jacques de Coeur
B. Chartreuse de Champmol
C. Saint Bavoโs
D. Saint-Maclou
Answer: A
Page reference: 588
54. A __________ was a selection of prayers and readings to be used in daily prayer
and meditation; it also included a calendar of holy days.
A. Block Book
B. Nuremberg Chronicle
C. Book of Hours
D. Diptych
Answer: C
Page reference: 568
55. An altarpiece may be placed on a base, known as a __________.
A. mensa
B. diptych
C. manuscript
D. predella
Answer: D
Page reference: 566
56. The __________ was one of the first books to be printed in the workshop of Johann
Gutenberg.
A. Broadsheet
B. Bible
C. Book of Hours
D. Very Sumptuous Hours
Answer: B
Page reference: 592
57. Tapestries provided both __________ and __________ for the stone walls of
fifteenth century buildings.
A. decoration; light
B. information; light
C. insulation; decoration
D. hiding; information
Answer: C
Page reference: 570
58. In the Mรฉrode Altarpiece (Figs. 19-10 and 19-11), the __________ is placed inside
a contemporary Flemish home.
A. Donor
B. Visitation
C. Christโs Baptism
D. Annunciation
Answer: D
Page reference: 573
59. In addition to their use in books, woodcuts and engraving techniques were used to
make many ____________prints in the early fifteenth century.
A. single-sheet
B. textile
C. secular
D. domestic
Answer: A
Page reference: 591
60. In landscapes, fifteenth-century Flemish painters relied on __________ to convey
spatial depth.
A. gold leaf
B. atmospheric perspective
C. local color
D. supernatural visions
Answer: B
Page reference: 564
61. __________ was first achieved in the workshop of Johann Gutenberg in Germany.
A. relief printing
B. engraving
C. movable-type printing
D. block books
Answer: C
Page reference: 592
62. Intaglio is a technique associated with __________.
A. oil painting
B. Books of Hours
C. engraving
D. Chartreuse de Champmol
Answer: C
Page reference: 592
63. Petrus Christusโs A Goldsmith in His Shop includes a small__________, which
unites the interior and exterior spaces and draws the viewer into the painting.
A. vase of lilies
B. water basin
C. sheath of hay
D. mirror
Answer: D
Page reference: 583
64. รtienne Chevalier and St. Stephen (Fig. 19-21) and __________ by Jean Fouquet
were originally the two wings of a diptych.
A. Adam and Eve
B. Prophets
C. Virgin and Child
D. Saint Anthony
Answer: C
Page reference: 586-587
65. In __________ printing, individual letters could be arranged, inked, and then printed
onto paper.
A. woodcut
B. movable-type printing
C. single-sheet
D. relief
Answer: B
Page reference: 592
66. The French church of __________ is an outstanding example of the Flamboyant
style.
A. Saint-Maclou
B. St. Wolfgang
C. Cathedral of Ghent
D. St. Stephenโs
Answer: A
Page reference: 587
67. The term โFlamboyantโ in architecture is a reference to the
A. the flame-like tracery patterns
B. geometric character
C. the height of the building
D. presence of windows
Answer: A
Page reference: 587
68. Why did Philip the Bold commission the Chartreuse de Champmol?
A. to hold his manuscript collection
B. to attract Franciscan monks
C. to rival local churches
D. to house his family tombs
Answer: D
Page reference: 564
69. The _______________ represents the complicated collaboration among scholars,
artists and investors in the history of printed books.
A. The Buxheim St. Christopher
B. Nuremberg Chronicle
C. The Temptations of St. Anthony
D. St. Wolfgang Altarpiece
Answer: B
Page reference: 592
70. Similar to Jan van Eyck, the objects in Hugo van der Goesโs Portinari Altarpiece
_________________.
A. contain a personal meaning for the donor
B. are secular references
C. have symbolic meaning
D. refer to the wealth of the donor
Answer: C
Page reference: 584
71. Characterized by slender figures and miniature landscape settings the
_____________ became the prevailing manner of late fourteenth-century Europe.
A. International Gothic style
B. linear perspective
C. noble
D. Flemish school
Answer: A
Page reference: 564
Short Answer
72. What is the Order of the Golden Fleece? Describe the purpose and decoration of
the cope associated with this Order.
73. Discuss the major work of Claus Sluter. Address the patronage surrounding his
work as well as his style and his use of medium.
74. Explain the achievements of the Limbourg brothers in their art.
75. Define the International Gothic style. Cite specific works of art and address style,
technique, and subject matter.
76. Discuss the importance of the fiber arts in โfifteenth century Flanders. Cite specific
examples.
77. Discuss the achievements of Jan van Eyck. Cite specific works of art, address style,
technique, subject matter, and patronage.
78. Discuss the patronage that produced the Chartreuse de Champmol. Consider the
painting and sculpture that were designed for this project.
79. Explain the technique of painting with an oil medium. Include examples of artists
and their work as part of your discussion.
80. How did women artists in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries learn to paint? Cite
examples of individual women artists.
81. Discuss the achievements of Roger van der Weyden. Cite specific works of art,
address style, technique, subject matter, and patronage.
82. How did the accomplishments of Robert Campin, Jan van Eyck, and Rogier van der
Weyden set the stage for the generation of Flemish painters who followed them?
Discuss specific painters, their style, and the works they produced.
83. Discuss the patronage, style, possible influences, and disguised symbolism of the
Portinari Altarpiece (Fig. 19-19).
84. Describe the types of patronage available in fifteenth-century Flanders. Was the
Church the only option?
85. In the fifteenth century, Germanic artists worked in two very different styles. Identify
these two styles and discuss one of these in relation to Konrad Witz.
86. Define the Flamboyant style. Cite specific examples.
87. What is meant by the term โdisguised symbolismโ? Provide examples of artists and
their work to support your answer.
88. Did other artists, outside of Flanders, have exposure to the style and technique of
Flemish painters? If so, how did this exposure occur? Who were these non-Flemish
painters? How did they assimilate fifteenth-century Flemish style and technique?
Essay
89. Discuss the evolution of the graphic arts in the fifteenth century to an art form
comparable to manuscript illumination or painting. Define the techniques used, and cite
specific artists and their works to support your discussion.
90. Discuss the Flemish school of painting in the fifteenth century. Address its origins,
technique, major artists, individual styles, commissions, and subject matter.
91. Consider the development of portraiture in fifteenth-century Flemish painting. How
did it develop? What were the circumstances? Cite specific works of art; address style,
technique, and patronage.
92. Consider changes in the practice of manuscript illumination from the late fourteenth
century into the fifteenth century. Include artists, their work, their style, the medium
employed, and the role of patronage in your discussion.
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