- Mon Sep 18, 2017 4:16 pm
#39948
It looks like you are assuming too much about art prior to, and even during, the cultural revolution, martinbeslu. Just because some artists were trained in Maoist art schools and then exiled to rural areas doesn't mean that no artists previously existed in those rural areas, nor does it mean there was never any prior interest in rural life. Artists in the cities might have been very interested in that rural life, and depicted it in their art prior to the revolution, whether they had spent time in rural areas or not. Some of those artists, whether from the cities or from rural areas, might have painted in some form of realist style. Basically, there is no evidence that Scar Art represented the first time any Chinese artists had shown any interest in rural life.
You're right that the passage does not come right out and say explicitly that the Scar Artists were doing what they did for political reasons, but there is plenty of reason to believe that they did based on what we learned in the passage. For example, when their approach to realism was eventually co-opted for political purposes, they abandoned it, so politics clearly had some influence on their decisions about what, and how, to paint. We also know that Scar Art developed as a direct result of their new experiences with the harshness of rural life, and that they painted things that their political leaders did not want them to paint, and that too suggests that politics played a part in shaping their choices. Even the irony mentioned beginning around line 15 indicates that Scar Art was influenced by the political forces of the time. There is much in the passage to suggest that these artists had contrasting political and artistic purposes as compared to the artists painting in the manner approved by the revolutionary forces.
Answer D is too far-reaching beyond the scope of the passage. We have no way of knowing what artists in China were doing or what they were interested in back in, say, 1925. That's enough to kill it.
I hope that helps!
Adam M. Tyson
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