- Mon Jun 19, 2023 6:16 pm
#102145
Hi Blondeucus!
We can glean that (D) must be true from the first two sentences of this stimulus. The first states, "More than any other genre of representational painting, still-life painting lends itself naturally to art whose goal is the artist's self-expression, rather than merely the reflection of a preexisting external reality."
The italicized language is why we know that there is not some other style of representational painting in which the artist can "always" modify, arrange, and choose the objects to be painted. This ability to choose, arrange, and modify is a feature of still-life painting--we're told that in the second sentence: "This is because in still-life painting, the artist invariably chooses, modifies, and arranges the objects to be painted."
Still life painting invariably/always involves such choosing, arranging, and modifying, and it does so "more than any other genre of representational painting." So there cannot be another type of representational painting that also always involves choosing, modifying, and arranging the objects to be painted.