XAT 2019VARC Question 21

AnalogyEasy
Passage / Data

Read the passage given below and answer the questions that follow.

There are no Commandments in art and no easy axioms for art appreciation. “Do I like this?” is the question anyone should ask themselves at the moment of confrontation with the picture. But if “yes,” why “yes”? and if “no,” why “no”? The obvious direct emotional response is never simple, and ninety-nine times out of a hundred, the “yes” or “no” has nothing at all to do with the picture in its own right. “I don’t understand this poem” and “I don’t like this picture” are statements that tell us something about the speaker. That should be obvious, but in fact, such statements are offered as criticisms of art, as evidence against, not least because the ignorant, the lazy, or the plain confused are not likely to want to admit themselves as such. We hear a lot about the arrogance of the artist but nothing about the arrogance of the audience. The audience, who have given no thought to the medium or the method, will glance up, flick through, chatter over the opening chords, then snap their fingers and walk away like some monstrous Roman tyrant. This is not arrogance; of course, they can absorb in a few moments, and without any effort, the sum of the artist and the art.

Admire me is the sub-text of so much of our looking; the demand put on art that it should reflect the reality of the viewer. The true painting, in its stubborn independence, cannot do this, except coincidentally. Its reality is imaginative not mundane.

When the thick curtain of protection is taken away; protection of prejudice, protection of authority, protection of trivia, even the most familiar of paintings can begin to work its power. There are very few people who could manage an hour alone with the Mona Lisa. Our poor art lover in his aesthetic laboratory has not succeeded in freeing himself from the protection of assumption. What he has found is that the painting objects to his lack of concentration; his failure to meet intensity with intensity. He still has not discovered anything about the painting, but the painting has discovered a lot about him. He is inadequate, and the painting has told him so.

When you say “This work is boring/ pointless/silly/obscure/élitist etc.,” you might be right, because you are looking at a fad, or you might be wrong because the work falls so outside of the safety of your own experience that in order to keep your own world intact, you must deny the other world of the painting. This denial of imaginative experience happens at a deeper level than our affirmation of our daily world. Every day, in countless ways, you and I convince ourselves about ourselves. True art, when it happens to us, challenges the “I” that we are and you say, “This work has nothing to do with me.”

Art is not a little bit of evolution that late-twentieth-century city dwellers can safely do without. Strictly, art does not belong to our evolutionary pattern at all. It has no biological necessity. Time taken up with it was time lost to hunting, gathering, mating, exploring, building, surviving, thriving. We say we have no time for art. If we say that art, all art. is no longer relevant to our lives, then we might at least risk the question “What has happened to our lives?” The usual question, “What has happened to art?” is too easy an escape route.

Which option does not reflect the relationship implicit in ‘Emendation : Editor’?

Answer & solution

  • A

    Discipline : Coach

  • B

    Injunction : Judge

  • C

    Examination : Doctor

  • D

    Renunciation : Saint

  • Illumination : Usher

Solution

‘Emendation’ means ‘a correction or improvement in a text’ which is the work of an ‘editor’. Inculcating ‘discipline’ in students is not the job of a ‘coach’. Thus option 1 is incorrect. Though an ‘injunction’ is ‘an order issued by a court to a party to refrain from some act’, a judge only gives justice. It is not his job to see to it that an injunction is issued. Thus option 2 is also incorrect. A ‘doctor’s job is to diagnose an illness by examining the patient. Thus option 3 is also incorrect. ‘Renunciation’ means ‘abandonment’ and not work of a saint but the mark of being a saint. Thus option 4 is also incorrect. An ‘usher’ illuminates the path so that he can show people to their seats. Retain option 5.
Hence, the correct answer is option 5.

XAT 2019 VARC Q21: Which option does not reflect the relationship implicit in ‘Emendation : Editor’? — Solution | TheCATExam