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MUSIC AND ARTS PRACTICE EXAM 3RD QUARTER

MUSIC
________ 1. A cultural movement that stressed emotion, imagination, individualism, and freedom of
expression.
________ 2. He was known as the “Poet of the Piano”.
________ 3. An instrumental composition of a pensive, dreamy, mood for the piano.
________ 4. A German dance in triple meter.
________ 5. He was known as the virtuoso pianist, composer, and the busiest musician during the Romantic
Era.
________ 6. Individuality of musical style with emphasis on self-expression is a characteristic of what era?
________ 7. Melody or harmony built from many if not all twelve semitones of the octave.
________ 8. The 5 emotions that program music was filled with are:
________ 9. Played a large role in the romantic era because composers from all over were taking their folk
songs from their home cities and putting them into larger works of their own.
________ 10. Artist thinks about beloved
________ 11. Ghosts and monsters gather for a funeral.
________ 12. At a young age, he learned to play guitar and flute.
________ 13. A verse form of narrative that is set to music.
________ 14. A musical movement of playful character typically in ABA form.
________ 15. A piece composed for the development of a specific technique.
________ 16. A Polish dance in triple meter time signature.
________ 17. A musical movement of playful character, typically in ABA form.
________ 18. Composition for one or more solo instruments usually considering of three or four independent
movements varying in key, mood, and tempo.
________ 19. Frederic Chopin began to play the piano at what age?
________ 20. He was known for his ballet music.
________ 21. It is described as a cultural movement that stressed emotion, imagination, individualism, and
freedom of expression. These characteristics are evident in music, art, and literature of the era.
________ 22. _____ of the Romantic period was filled with innovations. most of the compositions equire a high
level of virtuosity. Some were reinventions of sonatas of the Classical era.
________ 23. Is an instrumental composition that conveys images or scenes to tell a short story without text or
lyrics. It entices the imagination of the listener.
________ 24. He was considered as a composer who creates elegant music, neat, clean, and polished.
________ 25. Composer of Symphonie Fantastique
________ 26. The music journal that Robert Schumann founded.
________ 27. His musical skills started with playing the mandolin at the age of five and eventually transferred
his training to the violin at the age of seven with different violin professors in Italy.
________ 28. A short free-form musical composition usually for a solo instrument song, like the piano.
________ 29. Composition for one or more solo instruments usually consisting of three to for independent
movements varying in key, mood, and tempo.
________ 30. A short piece of music that can be used as a preface, and introduction to another work or may
stand on its own.

II. Matching Type


Column A Column B
________ 1. Revolutionary Etude, Op.10 a. Niccolo Paganini
________ 2. Abegg Variations b. Frederic Chopin
________ 3. La Campanella c. Franz Liszt
________ 4. Swan Lake d. Robert Schumann
________ 5. The nutcracker e. Hector Berlioz
________ 6. Symphonie Fantastique f. Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky
________ 7. Carnival of the Animals g. Camille Saint-Saens
________ 8. Liebestraume No. 3
________ 9. 24 Caprices for Solo Violin, Op. 1
________ 10. Fantasie in F Minor
________ 11. Kinderszenen
________ 12. Fraunliebe und Leben
________ 13. Dance Macabre
________ 14. Samson and Delilah
________ 15. The Carnival of Venice

ARTS
________ 1. Artists looked to Roman styles during this time of Alexander the Great for inspiration as well to
mimic their styles.
________ 2. He became famous for his marble sculptures that delicately rendered nude flesh.
________ 3. A marble sculpture portraying the relationship between Psyche and Cupid.
________ 4. Assumed life-size to monumental scale and focused on themes of heroism, patriotism, and virtue.
________ 5. Sculpture of a dying lion in Lucerne, Switzerland that commemorates the Swiss Guards who were
massacred in 1792 during the French Revolution.
________ 6. Architect who designed the White House and United States Capitol in Washington DC.
________ 7. Architecture style that features a balustrade which is a railing with vertical supports along the
edge of the roof.
________ 8. It embraced distinctive themes such as longing for history, supernatural elements, social
injustices, and nature.
________ 9. He was the pioneer of using both concrete and cast iron at second floors. He was the English
architect who built the London Custom House and British Museum.
________ 10. Portrays the victims of a contemporary shipwreck.
________ 11. Painter of the King of Spain.
________ 12. Cam be divided into artworks that concern human world and those that concern the natural
world.
________ 13. Who are the leading sculptors of the Romantic Era?
________ 14. He was best known for his social art which was aimed to inspire and capture the interest of a
broad public.
________ 15. Known as the La Marsellaise, this work portrays the Goddess Liberty urging the forces of the
French Revolution onward.
________ 16. Hercules with the Erymanthean Boar, depicting Hercules’ fourth labor, where he had to capture a
live wild boar from Mount Erymanthos.
________ 17. Also referred to as Victorian Gothic or Neo-Gothic is an architectural movement that began in
the late 1740s in England.
________ 18. He was the artist behind Britain’s foremost Gothic Revival Monument, the Westminster Palace
(The Houses of Parliament) in London.
________ 19. His crowning American work was the St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York, Manhattan.
________ 20. Depicts the physical world that surrounds us and includes features such as mountains, valleys,
vegetation, and bodies of water.
________ 21. The painting portrays two scantily clothed Christian female slaves being mocked by a group of
boorish Roman onlookers.
________ 22. He was a painter and sculptor who became one of the first recognized Philippine artists.
________ 23. Can be interpreted as an allegory of Imperial Roma corresponding to Imperial Spain. The image
of the Romans dragging the dead gladiators symbolizes the colonial oppression of the Indigenous populations.
________ 24. He was a portraitist and painter or rural Philippine landscapes, and he was popularly known for
his craftsmanship and mastery of the use of light.
________ 25. He was the most famous animal sculptor o all time. He studied the anatomy of his subjects by
sketching residents of the Paris Zoo.
________ 26. Shows King Aigeus and the Poseidon’s son, Theseus, they both visited Princess Aithra the very
same night. Theseus holding his knife over Minotaur, a monster having the head of a bull and the rest of the
body human, devouring human flesh.
________ 27. A painting of Kronos, eating his children, scared that he would be overthrown by one of them.
________ 28. A style with a flat roof and an exterior rich in classical details. It has a rectangular or square
shaped plan.
________ 29. He pioneered the development of Neoclassicm. He was also the designer of Church of Sainte-
Genevieve or The Parthenon in Paris.
________ 30. Portrayed happy Filipino villagers in their bright clothes and straw hats work together. Behind
them, releasing a peaceful plume of steam, rises. The beautifully symmetrical cone of Mayon Volcano.
________ 31. He is a Filipino sculptor who was named National artist for the Visual Arts in 1973. He was also
considered as the Father of Philippine Arts.
________ 32. Depicts a man facing upwards with arms outstretched, symbolizing selfless offering of oneself to
his country.
________ 33. A memorial monument in Caloocan Philippines to commemorate Philippine revolutionary Andres
Bonifacio, the founder and Supremo of Katipunan.
________ 34. He was considered as the National Artist for Sculpture and Father of Modern Philippine
Sculpture.
________ 35. Reinforced concrete work represents the nine muses of art: architecture, dance, film, literature,
music, painting, photography, sculpture, and theater.
________ 36. He painted The Church of Marissel Beauvais and Le Repos Sous Les Saules
________ 37. He painted the Der Kleine Fischer and Landscape with a plow man.
________ 38. Gothic Revival became widely used for churches and civic buildings throughout West, especially
in which countries?
________ 39. Depicts the Spanish restrains from Napoleon’s armies.
________ 40. The war that was represented in Liberty Leading the People
________ 41.

Matching Type
Column A Column B
________ 1. Napoleon Crossing the Alps a. Jacques-Louis David
________ 2. Lion of Lucerne b. Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres
________ 3. Washington c. Antonio Canova
________ 4. Library of Sainte-Genevieve d. Berthel Thorvaldsen
________ 5. Palais Garnier (Paris Opera House) e. Jacques-Germain Soufflot
________ 6. United States Capitol f. Robert Smirke
________ 7. Christ g. Jean Louis Theodore Gericault
________ 8. Theseus Slaying the Minotaur h. Eugene Delacroix
________ 9. Westminster Palace i. Francisco Goya
________ 10. Departure of the Volunteers j. Theodore Rousseau
________ 11. Der Kleine Fischer k. Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot
________ 12. Saturn Devouring His Son l. Francois Rude
________ 13. Liberty Leading the People m. Antoine-Louis barye
________ 14. Insane Woman n. Charles barry
________ 15.Portrait of Napoleon on the Imperial Throne o. James Renwick
________ 16. St. Patrick’s Cathedral
________ 17. The Church of Marissel, near Beauvais
________ 18. British Museum

Guess the artist


________ 1. He was a pupil of Jacques-Louis David. His paintings were usually nudes, portraits, and
mythological themes. He was also considered as one of the Old Masters of his era.
________ 2. He was the first internationally acclaimed Danish artist. He executed sculptures of mythological
and religious themes characters.
________ 3. He was an influential French painter in the Neoclassical style and considerde to be the pre-
eminent painter of the era.
________ 4. He was a prolific Italian artist and sculptor who became famous for his marble sculptures that
delicately rendered nude flesh.
________ 5. He was known as the Palladian architect of the Neoclassical who designed two well-known
American Civic Buildings.
________ 6. He was the first French master and the leader of the French realistic school.
________ 7. He was the most influential to the most of Romantic painters and eventually his technique was
adapted and extended by the Impressionist artists.
________ 8. He was a commissioned Romantic painter by the King of Spain. He was also the last of the ‘Old
Masters’ and first of the “Moderns”.
________ 9. He was best known for his social art which aimed to inspire and capture the interest of a broad
public.
________ 10. He was the most famous animal sculptor of all time. He studied the anatomy of his subjects by
sketching residents of the Paris Zoo.

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