NarratorListen to a lecture in an art class.Now get ready to answer the questi

游客2024-01-03  1

问题 Narrator
Listen to a lecture in an art class.
Now get ready to answer the questions. You may use your notes to help you answer. [br] According to the professor, what are the two tasks that would most likely be included in the students’ exam for this class?[CIink on 2 answers. ]
Narrator
Listen to a lecture in an art class.
Professor
Some people live with a little art, some live with a lot. Archduke Leopold Wilhelm, who ruled Belgium in the 17th century, obviously lived with a lot of art. His court painter, David Teniers the Younger, has left us a fascinating view of the Archduke’s private picture gallery. Please look at the screen showing this picture. Paintings large and small crowd nearly every inch of wall space, piled frame to frame almost to the ceiling, while the overflow works are stacked on the floor. Barely visible through the half-open door at rear is another room, equally crammed with paintings. Even the little dog leaping about in the foreground seems a trifle awed by it all. The Archduke, posing at center wearing a tall hat, has the look of a man pleased and satisfied with his fabulous collection.
    Throughout history individuals of wealth and standing have collected art on a grand scale. In the past, such collectors tended to be kings and queens, emperors and popes. Today, the most ambitious collecting is done by film stars, other entertainers, sports figures, and leaders of industry. None of this latter group would hang their art collections the way Archduke Leopold did; even museums with vast holdings do not. To our modem eyes the Archduke’s gallery seems more than a little over-decorated. However, this fashion for conspicuous display of art remained popular well into the 20th century.
    Relatively few of us have the money or the inclination to acquire great quantities of fine artworks, but that doesn’t mean we are not involved with art. Who lives with art? You do. Everybody does. It would be impossible not to live with art, because art is inextricably connected to human existence. Art has been with us since the earliest cave dwellers made their first steps toward civilization and will be with us as long as civilized life continues on our planet.
    You probably have more art in your life than you realize. If you live in a city or town, artists have designed almost everything in your environment. The buildings in which you live and work, the furniture inside those buildings, the clothes you wear -all were designed by artists in specialized fields. Very likely the walls of your home are decorated with posters, prints, photographs, maybe original paintings that you have hung to give personal meaning to your world. Perhaps your school or office building has a large sculpture out front or a fabric hanging or mural inside.
    Whether we know it or not, all of us make choices—every day, every minute— with respect to art. We choose one product over another, one garment over another, one way to walk from place to place, basing our decisions largely on the visual impact of the preferred option. We choose to study and enjoy particular works of art or to ignore them. We choose to plan encounters with art, as in museums and galleries, or not to do so.
    Whatever our degree of involvement with art, we must remember that it is a choice. We can go through life like sleepwalkers, ignoring or taking for granted the art around us. Or we can enrich our lives by developing a more active appreciation of the art we live with. This course is about the appreciation of art, which means a combination of understanding and enjoyment. It is possible to heighten our appreciation of art, to learn to see, to take an active interest in the visual world. When we do so, we are only following a basic aesthetic impulse—an urge to respond to that which we find beautiful.
Now get ready to answer the questions. You may use your notes to help you answer.
17. What is the talk mainly about?
18. How does the professor clarify his points about the art in our lives?
Listen again to part of the lecture. Then answer the question.
Professor
Whether we know it or not, all of us make choices—every day, every minute- with respect to art.
We choose one product over another, one garment over another, one way to walk from place to place, basing our decisions largely on the visual impact of the preferred option.
19. What does the professor imply when he says this?  
Professor
Whether we know it or not, all of us make choices—every day, every minute—with respect to art.
20. Why does the professor say this?  
Professor
We can go through life like sleepwalkers, ignoring or taking for granted the art around us. Or we can enrich our lives by developing a more active appreciation of the art we live with.
21. According to the professor, what is one important difference between collectors before the 20th century and collectors now?
22. According to the professor, what are the two tasks that would most likely be included in the students’ exam for this class?

选项 A、Calculate the average cost of each piece of art in a collection.
B、Explain how art is related to everyday life.
C、Reflect on art in their daily life experience.
D、Design historical books for the big collectors

答案 B,C

解析 本题为多选推论题,要求考生能够根据说话者所表达的内容对其内在含义作出推测。题目问:以下选项中哪两项最可能作为这门课的考试内容?A项说是计算收藏中每件藏品的平均价值;B项说是解释艺术与生活的关系;C项说是在生活中思考艺术问题;D项说是为大收藏家策划历史书籍。根据教授最后所说的“This course is about the appreciation of art,whichmeans a combination of understanding and enjoyment(本课程主要是关于艺术的欣赏,这就意味着既要了解艺术又要欣赏艺术)”可知,B、C两项最可能成为考试的内容。
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