- Sun Dec 29, 2019 11:53 am
#72882
The referenced text in lines 25-27 is "sculptors through the ages had relied exclusively upon negative light - that is, shadows - for their conceptual communication, precisely because no metals, other than the expensive, non-oxidizing gold, could be relied upon to give off positive-light reflections." It is clear that the distinction was drawn between normal metals used in sculptures (brass and bronze) and the expensive, non-oxidizing gold. Chrome-nickel steel appeared in the following paragraph. So I'm really reluctant to look for information concerning Chrome-nickel steel later in the text to answer this question.
The most obvious distinction is brass and bronze produce negative light reflections, while gold produces positive-light reflections. I have no idea what negative and positive light reflections mean and the "shadow" explanation is not particularly helpful, but I assume it has something to do with the degree of reflections that they give off. That's why I'm looking for something like "moderately reflective" v. "highly reflective," which is (A). I eliminated (B) and (D) because they both compare two highly reflective metals.
Alternatively, since the negative v. positive distinction does not come up in the answer choices, with the backdrop of Noguchi being original, unconventional, creative, and evolving all the time, I'm leaning towards (E) - acceptable to both traditional and modern sculptors v. purely experimental. It was also specifically supported by line 22 - "Noguchi ... pondered the fact that sculptors through the ages had relied exclusively upon negative light ..." Wouldn't "sculptors through the ages" correlate with conventional sculptors and Noguchi's creative use of metals that give off positive-light reflections indicate its experimental nature, since he's the one who likes to try out (experiment with) new things?
I would never thought of (C) because it doesn't speak to the negative-positive distinction, but introduces a temporary v. permanent distinction. It's hard to draw that distinction solely by the wording of "could or could not be relied upon to give off positive-light reflections," as it literally means it could not reliably or consistently produce positive light reflections, or simply it couldn't, as opposed to it could, but only for the initial time.