CAT 2020 Slot 2VARC Question 10

Mixed PracticeEasy
Passage / Data

Direction for Reading Comprehension: The pass ages given here are followed by some questions that have four answer choices; read the passage carefully and pick the option whose answer best aligns with the passage

The claims advanced here may be condensed into two assertions: [first, that visual] culture is what images, acts of seeing, and attendant intellectual, emotional, and perceptual sensibilities do to build, maintain, or transform the worlds in which people live. [And second, that the] study of visual culture is the analysis and interpretation of images and the ways of seeing (or gazes) that configure the agents, practices, conceptualities, and institutions that put images to work. . . .

Accordingly, the study of visual culture should be characterized by several concerns. First, scholars of visual culture need to examine any and all imagery – high and low, art and non art.. . . They must not restrict themselves to objects of a particular beauty or aesthetic value. Indeed, any kind of imagery may be found to offer up evidence of the visual construction of reality. . . .

Second, the study of visual culture must scrutinize visual practice as much as images themselves, asking what images do when they are put to use. If scholars engaged in this enterprise inquire what makes an image beautiful or why this image or that constitutes a masterpiece or a work of genius, they should do so with the purpose of investigating an artist’s or a work’s contribution to the experience of beauty, taste, value, or genius. No amount of social analysis can account fully for the existence of Michelangelo or Leonardo. They were unique creators of images that changed the way their contemporaries thought and felt and have continued to shape the history of art, artists, museums, feeling, and aesthetic value. But study of the critical, artistic, and popular reception of works by such artists as Michelangelo and Leonardo can shed important light on the meaning of these artists and their works for many different people. And the history of meaning-making has a great deal to do with how scholars as well as lay audiences today understand these artists and their achievements.

Third, scholars studying visual culture might properly focus their interpretative work on lifeworlds by examining images, practices, visual technologies, taste, and artistic style as constitutive of social relations. The task is to understand how artifacts contribute to the construction of a world. . . . Important methodological implications follow: ethnography and reception studies become productive forms of gathering information, since these move beyond the image as a closed and fixed meaning-event. . . .

Fourth, scholars may learn a great deal when they scrutinize the constituents of vision, that is, the structures of perception as a physiological process as well as the epistemological frameworks informing a system of visual representation. Vision is a socially and a biologically constructed operation, depending on the design of the human body and how it engages the interpretive devices developed by a culture in order to see intelligibly. . . . Seeing . . . operates on the foundation of covenants with images that establish the conditions for meaningful visual experience.

Finally, the scholar of visual culture seeks to regard images as evidence for explanation, not as epiphenomena.

“Seeing . . . operates on the foundation of covenants with images that establish the conditions for meaningful visual experience.” In light of the passage, which one of the following statements best conveys the meaning of this sentence?

Answer & solution

  • A

    Sight as a meaningful visual experience is possible when there is a foundational condition established in images of covenants.

  • B

    Images are meaningful visual experiences when they have a foundation of covenants seeing them.

  • Sight becomes a meaningful visual experience because of covenants of meaningfulness that we establish with the images we see.

  • D

    The way we experience sight is through images operated on by meaningful covenants.

Solution

Easy

Unpack the quoted sentence: meaningful visual experience ("seeing") rests on a "foundation of covenants with images" — i.e. agreements we form with images that set the conditions for meaning. Pick the option that keeps the causal direction right: the covenants we establish with images make seeing meaningful.

A

Incorrect. It distorts the location of the foundation, saying the condition is "established in images of covenants." The original places the covenant between the viewer and the image, not as something built inside the images.

B

Incorrect. Garbled and reversed: it makes images themselves the "meaningful visual experiences" and mangles "a foundation of covenants seeing them." The sentence is about seeing, not about images being experiences.

C

Correct. A clean restatement: sight becomes meaningful because of the covenants of meaningfulness we establish with the images we see. It keeps both the agent (we), the mechanism (covenants), and the outcome (meaningful visual experience).

D

Incorrect. It reverses the relationship, making images "operated on by meaningful covenants" the route to sight. The original makes our covenants with images the foundation of meaningful seeing, not covenants operating on images.

Option C — it preserves the original idea: meaningful seeing arises from the covenants of meaningfulness we form with the images we see.

CAT 2020 Slot 2 VARC Q10: “Seeing . . . operates on the foundation of covenants with images that establish the conditions for mean — Solution | TheCATExam