- Fri Aug 02, 2019 6:54 pm
#67017
Hi Lane,
Delacroix is used as a counterexample to the numerous others given by the passage of artists presaging social changes. Instead, he was adapting to social changes, rather than predicting them, something that other artists also did. The problem is that we don't know and aren't told the relative ratio between artists who predict and those that adapt to social changes. So as you note, the "usually" in answer choice (A) isn't supported by the text, as it would mean that the majority of artistic changes predict social change rather than the other way around.
More importantly, this isn't why Delacroix is brought up: he is used as an example of social change preceding an artistic one, showing that not all artistic change precedes a social one, exactly what (B) is saying. Be careful not to just focus on what is true or untrue about the passage, but also what the specific question is asking.
Hope this clears things up!