What does the portrait of Nell Gwynne by Lely, commissioned by Charles the Second, demonstrate according to the text?

Correct answer: Her submission to the owner's feelings or demands.

Explanation

This question uses a specific artwork, the portrait of Nell Gwynne, to illustrate the connection between the female nude, submission, and male ownership.

Other questions

Question 1

According to the text, a man's presence is dependent upon what promise?

Question 2

How does the text describe the state of a woman's self as a result of societal expectations?

Question 3

What simplified statement does the author use to summarize the different roles of men and women in society?

Question 4

According to the text, what is the 'principal, ever-recurring subject' in one major category of European oil painting?

Question 5

What does the text identify as a striking fact about the story of Adam and Eve from Genesis, in relation to sight?

Question 6

How did the depiction of Adam and Eve's shame change from the medieval tradition to the Renaissance, according to the text?

Question 7

In paintings of Susannah and the Elders, how does the text describe the relationship between the viewer and the figures in the painting?

Question 8

What was the stated symbolic function of the mirror in paintings of women, and what does the author call this moralizing?

Question 9

According to the text, what was the 'real function' of the mirror in paintings of nudes?

Question 10

What new element did the theme of 'The Judgement of Paris' add to the tradition of the nude?

Question 11

What does the text say is the difference between nakedness and nudity in the European tradition, according to art historian Kenneth Clark?

Question 12

How does the author define being 'nude' as distinct from being 'naked'?

Question 13

The author claims that 'Nudity is a form of...' what?

Question 14

Who is the 'principal protagonist' in the average European oil painting of the nude, according to the text?

Question 15

In the discussion of Bronzino's 'Allegory of Time and Love', what does the author say about the arrangement of Venus's body?

Question 16

What convention regarding the depiction of the female body is mentioned as helping to minimize the woman's own sexual passion?

Question 17

When comparing the expression of a model in an Ingres painting to a model in a 'girlie magazine', what conclusion does the author draw?

Question 18

In post-Renaissance European sexual imagery that includes couples, what is the presumed role of the spectator-owner?

Question 19

Approximately how many 'exceptional nudes' that break the norms of the art form does the author estimate exist within the tradition?

Question 20

What defines the 'exceptional' nudes that break from the European tradition?

Question 21

When discussing the sexual function of nakedness in reality, what element does the author say enters at the moment of first perception?

Question 22

According to the author, why is it difficult to create a static image of sexual nakedness?

Question 23

What is the 'easy solution' for a photographer who wants to depict a naked figure but avoid the chilling banality of a static image?

Question 24

In the analysis of Rubens's painting of Hélène Fourment, what is the approximate sideways displacement of her thighs in relation to her hips?

Question 25

What does the anatomical displacement in Rubens's painting of Hélène Fourment permit the body to do?

Question 26

What fundamental contradiction in the European tradition of the nude does the text identify?

Question 27

How did the artist Dürer believe the ideal nude ought to be constructed?

Question 28

Why does the author consider Manet's painting 'Olympia' to be a turning point in the art-form of the European nude?

Question 29

What is the primary reason given for why women are depicted differently from men in art?

Question 30

At the end of the chapter, the author proposes an experiment to the reader. What does this experiment involve?

Question 31

According to the proposed experiment, the violence of transforming a female nude into a male figure is done to what?

Question 32

A woman's presence, in contrast to a man's, expresses what?

Question 33

The surveyor of woman in herself is described as being what?

Question 35

How does the text characterize nakedness in non-European traditions like Indian or Persian art?

Question 36

Why must a woman's sexual passion be minimized in the traditional European nude, according to the text?

Question 37

In the context of Rembrandt's painting 'Danäe' being an 'exceptional' nude, what is the spectator forced to recognize?

Question 38

What is the sequence of experience described for creating a shared mystery in sexual intimacy?

Question 39

What distinguishes a 'lover' from a 'voyeur' in the context of Rubens's painting of Hélène Fourment?

Question 40

In Dürer's method of constructing an ideal nude, how many different women's body parts are mentioned in the text's example?

Question 41

What became the 'quintessential woman' of early avant-garde twentieth-century painting after the ideal was broken?

Question 42

The author states that today, the attitudes and values that informed the tradition of the nude are expressed through what?

Question 43

What is the result of a woman's sense of being in herself being supplanted by a sense of being appreciated by another?

Question 44

What does the text say about the depiction of shame in medieval illustrations of the Fall of Man?

Question 45

How does the text describe the absurdity of male flattery in the public academic art of the nineteenth century?

Question 46

What does the text say a woman 'offers up' in her expression of calculated charm directed at an imagined male viewer?

Question 47

In the context of the European tradition, the woman depicted in a nude painting is there to feed what?

Question 48

At the moment of perceiving nakedness in reality, the text says our perception shifts from expressive parts like eyes and mouth to what?

Question 49

The 'relief' felt at the sight of another's nakedness, according to the text, is the relief of finding what?

Question 50

In the author's analysis, how is the coherence of Hélène Fourment's body in Rubens's painting achieved?