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文章大意:本文是一篇记叙文,主要讲述了街头艺术家Shane Grammer在加利福尼亚州历史上最致命的野火后,用喷漆在废墟上创作壁画,带给受害者希望的故事。

1 . Shane Grammer’s artwork can be found in cities in Mexico, South Korea, Dubai and beyond.In the past years, it’s the murals (壁画) he painted on damaged walls throughout the town of Paradise, California that have gained attention and touched viewers.

In 2018, the Camp Fire, the deadliest wildfire in California’s history, swept through Paradise, flattening entire communities, killing scores of people, and displacing tens of thousands. Grammer,whose hometown was just 15 miles from Paradise, was living with his family and working in the Los Angeles area when he saw accounts of the destruction on his friends’ social media pages. A single mother he knew shared a photo of ash and rubble where her home once stood. A childhood friend’s post showed her burned-down house. After he saw a photo of a friend Shane Edwards’ home, which had been reduced to a brick wall with only a chimney standing, he was driven to paint it.

With Edward’s permission, Grammer then used spray paint to transform Edwards’ burnt chimney into a strikingly black-and-white portrait of a woman, a piece he called “Beauty Among the Ashes.” Once the image was posted on Instagram, the victims of the fire, especially, could not contain themselves. “You bring beauty and hope.” one posted. Over three months, the 47-year-old created a series of more than a dozen spray-painted murals on the remains of buildings and vehicles rendered useless by the flames. The images included a victim of the fire, a young girl who survived but lost her house, and a series of religious characters.

As a street artist, Grammer has committed his life to creating more art installations (装置艺术) all over the world that connect people through tragic life events. He has started a foundation called the Art Through Hope Foundation where he intends to bring peace through his art to those affected by tragedy. “I want to do something powerful and make art that emotionally influences people,” said Grammer in an interview with KRCR. “I think any artist would consider that as their ultimate goal. And to me, that is the biggest miracle I feel like.”

1. What has led to Grammer’s rise to fame?
A.The Art Through Hope Foundation.B.The post of a burnt-down house.
C.His paintings on the ruins in Paradise.D.His art installations all over the world.
2. Why did Grammor paint murals after the Camp Fire?
A.To record the wildfire.B.To bring hope to the victims.
C.To add beauty to the ashes.D.To remember his friend's home.
3. What docs the underlined word “that” in the last paragraph refer to?
A.Creating touching art.B.Working miracles in art.
C.Bringing peace through art.D.Doing something powerful.
4. Which of the following is the best title for the text?
A.From Ashes to Art: Street Artist’s Murals of Hope
B.From Paradise to Worldwide: Street Artist’s Journey
C.From Tragedy to Hope: the Story of Shane Grammer
D.From Mural to Miracle: Shane Grammer’s Art Mission
今日更新 | 39次组卷 | 1卷引用:浙江省9+1高中联盟2023-2024学年高二下学期4月期中英语试题
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文章大意:本文为一篇记叙文,讲述了艺术家Sarahi Zacatelco的经历和艺术启发来源。

2 . Inside the low lighting of Gather East Rock, the smell of coffee beans swirls (打旋) through the air. Art adorns (装点) the blue walls, but one painting stands out among the others. The painting’s name is “Mother Divine”, by the artist Sarahi Zacatelco. The mother in question is a green woman, with colorful plants adorning her head and water dripping (滴下) down her neck. In every brushstroke, Zacatelco pays homage to the man who taught her how to paint: her grandfather Agustin.

Born in 1982, Zacatelco learned how to create art from her grandfather in Oaxaca. At the time, her grandfather lived with her while her mother worked. Together, the two spent hours going out to the central plaza in Juchitán, where she let her senses take over. “You can see the food, you can smell it, you can see the lady selling flowers, and you can see everything,” she recalled excitedly. When she was six years old, her grandfather gave her a piece of paper and watercolors and showed her how to put the colors on it. She hasn’t stopped making art since.

Zacatelco’s grandparents made chess pieces out of rocks and wood to sell. They also made Talavera pottery (陶器) pieces, which Zacatelco described as “a Baroque tradition” that one might see in old colonial (殖民地的) homes. She no longer has any of her grandparent’s Talavera —“the tradition was lost due to being poorly paid and a lot of effort going into each piece.”

In the 1990s, Zacatelco’s mother decided to move her family to give them a better life. She moved her children to Mexico City, then to the Bronx, and then to the Brownsville neighborhood in Eastern Brooklyn. The family moved to Fair Haven, where Zacatelco still lives, in 2001. She called it the perfect place to raise two boys and two girls. Her family did not keep any of her grandfather’s old art before he died. But his artistic spirit did not die with him. Zacatelco carries on his legacy today with her art.

1. How is paragraph 1 developed?
A.By testing an assumption.B.By giving a description.
C.By making a comparison.D.By analyzing a phenomenon.
2. How did Agustin inspire Zacatelco’s artistic spirit at first?
A.He instructed her in watercolor painting.
B.He introduced sensory experiences to her.
C.He taught her to make chess pieces out of rocks.
D.He asked her to observe his creation of pottery pieces.
3. Why did Zacatelco’s mother move her family?
A.She wanted them to live a better life.
B.She needed to change jobs frequently.
C.She found their house was too small for them.
D.She wanted to relieve the pain of losing a loved one.
4. What would be the best title for this text?
A.Art: comfort for imperfect lives
B.Baroque tradition: a dying art form
C.An artist’s first teacher: her grandfather
D.An artist’s moving experiences: sources of inspiration
7日内更新 | 20次组卷 | 1卷引用:福建省福州延安中学2023-2024学年高二下学期期中考试英语试卷
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文章大意:本文是一篇新闻报道。文章主要报道了英国艺术家Ben Wilson如何将被人们忽视的口香糖变成美丽的艺术品的故事。

3 . Lying on London’s famous Millennium Bridge, British artist Ben Wilson paints on a piece of dried gum (口香糖). It has been crushed flat into the ground. “The important thing is that there are tire marks on the gum with different patterns,” said the 60-year-old Wilson. “The beauty of them is that they’re of different shapes and sizes…” he continued, describing pieces of gum.

Wilson sees possibility in things most people avoid looking at. The flattened gum offers a chance to turn a piece of waste into something beautiful. The artwork is also a way to surprise walkers and get them to take a closer look at the path they are on.

“By painting a picture which is so small, I can let those who see it discover a hidden world beneath their feet,” Wilson said.

Back in his north London art room, Wilson paints on the surface of a small mosaic tile (瓷砖). It will be part of a collection that he is creating on the walls of London’s underground platforms. “The images are more personal than the chewing gum works,” Wilson says, “and represent a kind of visual diary.”

Wilson was born to artist parents in London. He remembers working with clay from the age of three. He had his first art show when he was around 10 years old. He began making sculptures and large pieces for display in natural settings. Then his interest turned to waste. He has been painting on gum and other pieces of rubbish for 19 years.

The top surface of the dried gum is not subject to local or national laws. As a result, the dried gum surface creates a space, where Wilson says he can paint without damaging public property.

Government officials have removed much of the artist’s public street art. But the hundreds of gum paintings on Millennium Bridge remain for all to see.

1. What is the dried gum like in the eyes of Wilson?
A.Dirty.B.Strange.C.Practical.D.Attractive.
2. Which statement can best describe Wilson?
A.He creates a hidden world.B.He keeps a diary with drawings.
C.He reminds people to walk carefully.D.He makes the ugly become beautiful.
3. What does the author mainly tell us about Wilson in paragraph 5?
A.His great language talent.B.His artistic career.
C.His unusual childhood.D.His parents’ artistic achievements.
4. What do we know about the Wilson’s street paintings?
A.Some of them are protected by law.B.All of them are not kept well.
C.They are valued by officials.D.They polluted the streets.
7日内更新 | 50次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届山西省名校联考高三下学期二模英语试题
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文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。主要介绍了莫奈的名画《印象:日出》以及它对印象主义艺术流派的影响。

4 . Monet gets his place in the art timeline because of his leading role in the impressionist art movement, and through the lasting appeal of his artistic style. The painting he titled Impression: Sunrise, done early in his career, may not seem one of Monet’s best paintings, but the big deal about it is that it was the painting that gave impressionism its name.

Done with oil paint on canvas, this painting is characterized by thin washes of rather mild colors, on top of which he painted short strokes of pure color. Monet gave depth and perspective to an otherwise flat painting by the use of aerial perspective (空间透视法). Look closely at the three boats, and you can see how these get lighter in the tone, which is the way aerial perspective works. The lighter boats appear to be further away from us than the darkest one.

Monet exhibited the painting in what we now call the First Impressionist Exhibition, in Paris. Monet and a group of about 30 other artists, frustrated by restrictions and politics of the official annual art salon, had decided to hold their own independent exhibition, an unusual thing to do at the time. They called themselves the Anonymous Society of Painters, Sculptors, Engravers, etc., which included artists who are now world famous such as Renoir, Degas, Pissarro, Morisot, and Cezanne. Monet said he’d called the painting “impression” because “it really couldn’t pass as a view of Le Harve”.

Louis Leroy, an art critic, in his review of the exhibition used the title of Monet’s painting as the headline, calling it the “Exhibition of Impressionists”. Leroy had meant it ironically as the term “impression” was used to describe a rapidly finished painting of an atmospheric effect, and artists rarely, if ever, exhibited pictures so quickly sketched. The label stuck. In his review published on 25 April, 1874, Leroy wrote,“Wallpaper in its embryonic (萌芽期的) state is more finished than that seascape.” Then in a supportive review published a few days later, Jules Castagnary was the first art critic to use the term “Impressionism” in a positive way.

1. What do we know about Monet’s Impression: Sunrise?
A.It was universally acknowledged as Monet’s best painting.
B.Leroy was deeply impressed by the painter’s remarkable skill.
C.The different tones of the three boats gave depth to the painting.
D.It was exhibited in the official annual art salon with 30 other artists.
2. What does the underlined sentence in paragraph 4 mean?
A.The label met strong opposition from other art critics.
B.The label was stuck to the surface of Monet’s painting.
C.The label was not regarded as a positive image.
D.The label stayed and became widely used after that.
3. Who is the first to use the term “Impressionists”?
A.Monet.B.Leroy.C.Renoir.D.Castagnary.
4. What does the passage mainly talk about?
A.Impression: Sunrise gave Impressionism its name.
B.Critics had a disagreement over Monet’s painting.
C.Monet is a leading artist of Impressionism.
D.Impressionism is an appealing artistic style.
7日内更新 | 60次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届辽宁省大连育明高中高三一模英语试题
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了美国表演艺术家Chita Rivera,其百老汇生涯跨越半个多世纪,凭借才华与坚韧,两度荣获托尼奖,展现艺术生涯的辉煌与不懈追求。

5 . Famous American performer Chita Rivera died on January 30 in New York. She was 91 years old. The famed dancer, singer and actor won many awards and honors in her long career on Broadway and beyond.

Rivera first gained wide notice in 1957 as Anita in the original production of the musical play West Side Story. She was still dancing on New York’s Broadway stages a half century later in 2015’s The Visit.

“I wouldn’t know what to do if I wasn’t moving or telling a story to you or singing a song,” she said at the time. “That’s the spirit of my life, and I’m really so lucky to be able to do what I love, even at this time in my life.”

Rivera was born on January 23, 1933, in Washington, D.C. Her father was a musician. He died when Rivera was seven. Her mother was of Scottish and Italian ancestry(血统).

Rivera studied dance as a young girl and was accepted into a highly respected school for ballet. She was 17 when she won her first part in a musical.

She won two Tonys, the highest award for live theater in the United States. Her first came in1984 with the production of The Rink. She won again in 1993 for the play Kiss of the Spider Woman.

The second Tony was an especially sweet victory for the star. Just five years earlier, Rivera had been in a serious car accident that broke her right leg. It could have ended her career. After months of physical treatment to regain her dancing skills, she returned to the stage singing and dancing as energetically as ever. She said, “It never entered my mind that I wouldn’t dance again.”

When accepting a Special Tony Award for Lifetime Achievement in 2018, Rivera said, “I wouldn’t trade my life in the theater for anything, because theater is life.”

1. Why does the author mention the two plays West Side Story and The Visit?
A.To show respect for late Rivera.B.To stress Rivera’s long art career.
C.To indicate why Rivera won honors.D.To introduce the plays Rivera performed.
2. What can we learn from Rivera’s words in paragraph 3?
A.Art is everything to her.B.She was sorry for her old age.
C.Art lifts her spirits when she’s in trouble.D.She received good training in art.
3. What does the underlined word “It” in paragraph 7 refer to?
A.Her leg.B.The musical.C.The accident.D.Her award.
4. Which words can best describe Rivera?
A.Independent and thoughtful.B.Caring and curious.
C.Determined and talented.D.Proud and confident.
7日内更新 | 19次组卷 | 1卷引用:河南省多校联考2023-2024学年高一下学期4月期中英语试题
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文章大意:这是一篇应用文。文章主要介绍了著名画家毕加索。

6 . Pablo Picasso was probably the most famous artist and one of the greatest creative minds of the 20th century. This great artist lived more artistic lifetimes than any of his peers. During his 75-year career, he produced thousands of works, not only paintings but also sculptures, prints, and ceramics, using a wide variety of materials. He almost single-handedly created modern art, changing art more profoundly than any other artist of his century.

Born in 1881, in Spain, Picasso was a child with great talents, completing the one-month qualifying examination for the Academy of Fine Arts in Barcelona in one day at the age of 14. After finishing his studies in Barcelona, the artist continued his training in Madrid but later returned to Barcelona. There began his “blue period”, so named for the dominant blue tones in the artist’s paintings. During this time, he moved frequently between Barcelona and Paris. In Paris, he spent his days studying the masterworks at the Louvre and his nights with other artists at night clubs, during which time he became fascinated with the circus world’s acrobats and wandering performers. This marked a radical change in color and mood for the artist. He began painting in subtle pinks and grays, often highlighted with brighter tones. This was known as his “rose period”.

The peak of Picasso’s creativity is evidenced in his pioneering role in Cubism. In 1907, he painted Les Demoiselles d’Avignon, a Cubist painting which changed 20th century art completely. In it, the artist and viewer look at the subjects from many different angles at the same time. Picasso and French painter Georges Braque were the leading figures of the Cubist movement. For Picasso, the 1920s were years of rich artistic exploration and great productivity. He designed theater sets and painted in Cubist, Classical styles. In the last decades of his life, he still experimented with new methods of printing and painted a series of variations of old master paintings. He died in France in 1973, at the age of 91. His powers of creativity and execution continue to astonish artists all over the world.

1. How are Picasso’s early paintings categorized?
A.According to their subject matter.
B.According to where he lived and worked.
C.According to the colors he used.
D.According to the trainings he got.
2. What does the writer suggest in this passage?
A.Picasso was accomplished in a number of media.
B.Picasso was primarily an accomplished painter and illustrator.
C.Picasso was an artist who was known for a limited number of works.
D.Picasso was an artist who had the longest life span.
3. What can we assume according to the passage?
A.Picasso’s reputation exceeded other artists of the period.
B.Picasso was a solitary genius, unconnected to others of the period.
C.Picasso’s genius failed him in the later years of his life.
D.Picasso’s genius astonished artists all over the world after his death.
4. Why does the author write this passage?
A.To explain the reasons for Picasso’s creativity.
B.To describe the major periods that marked Picasso’s artistry.
C.To compare Picasso with other painters and styles of the period.
D.To stimulate modern artists to learn from Picasso.
2024-05-05更新 | 24次组卷 | 1卷引用:上海市紫竹园中学2023-2024学年高二下学期期中考试英语试题
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了音乐家André Rieu的个人经历以及成就。

7 . Mary Poppins held on to her famous black umbrella while floating overhead and singing “Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious.” The audience watched in amazement, and many sang along! Poppins floated for a bit and eventually landed in the midst of the excited crowd before getting on stage. No, this wasn’t a scene from a Disney movie.     1    His background helps explain his passion for music. The world-renowned violinist and conductor was born into a musical family in October 1949 in Maastricht, Netherlands. He began learning to play the violin at age five and immediately fell in love with the instrument!

    2     He started by creating a small ensemble (乐团). Then in 1978, Rieu established the Maastricht Salon Orchestra, from which he later developed the Johann Strauss Orchestra.

They had limited success until 1995 when Rieu was asked to provide entertainment for a soccer game. He got the entire stadium to sing along to a popular waltz.     3    

Today Rieu is the best-selling classical artist worldwide. He has sold in the ballpark of an astonishing 40 million records. He is the biggest male solo touring artist on the planet. His concerts sell more tickets than Beyoncé and Bruce Springsteen!

Many classical concerts are serious events, but Rieu’s are the opposite. He’s been nicknamed “The King of the Waltz” because he loves waltzes.     4     Rieu says, “I love Johann Strauss, but I am also fascinated by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Bruce Springsteen.”

His shows are attended by people of all ages and always include surprises, like the delightful appearance by Mary Poppins. As Rieu says, “I only play music that touched my heart. And I know when it touches my heart, it will touch your heart.” During his performances, many audience members are visibly moved. They often clap, sing, dance, laugh, weep or hug one another. Rieu promises his audience, “You will have an evening that you will never forget.”And he is true to his word.

A.Afterward, he sold over 200,000 CDs and his popularity rising.
B.Rather, it was part of one of André Rieu’s amazing concerts.
C.As a result, Rieu became a house-hold name and won great popularity.
D.Yet his shows consist of an extensive variety of musical genres and performances.
E.Then, Rieu continued his style until he got his nickname.
F.From early on, Rieu knew what he wanted - his own orchestra.
2024-05-04更新 | 33次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届上海市宝山区高三下学期第二次教学质量监测试英语试题
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文章大意:这是一篇新闻报道,文章主要介绍了美国歌星泰勒·斯威夫特给全球经济带来的巨大影响。

8 . In the complicated network of global economics, one figure has emerged at a highly influential level over the past couple years: Taylor Swift. The pop singer’s impact has extended far beyond her award-winning songs and into the international business stage, with what’s been referred to as “swiftonomics”.

Many believe that the start of Swift’s ongoing world tour, named “The Eres Tour,” was the beginning of exceptionally high economic impact across the United States. Ticketing giants like Ticketmaster and Seat Geek saw impressive sales as fans packed stadiums nationwide, earning an amazing $ 554 million. Globally, the tour raked in an estimated $ 1.04 billion in ticket sales-the first tour in history to hit the billion-dollar milestone.

Swiftonomics go beyond just ticket sales. As the singer added more dates in different countries to her tour, hotels, restaurants, and transportation services of each location’s economy experienced a notable rise. So far, Swift has generated $ 4.6 billion in consumer spending in the United States alone, and this number is expected to exceed $ 5 billion overall. With the Asia leg of her tour kicking off yesterday- starting in Japan-experts have predicted that similar economic boosts will ensue. According to Tokyo City University lecturer Mitsumasa Etou, Swift is expected to generate up to 34.1 billion yen. Etou named the tour Japan’s “biggest ever musical event in terms of predicted economic impact.”

For countries like Singapore, swiftonomics present an opportunity to boost more than just their economy; according to Singapore University Associate Professor Lau Kong Cheen. the Eras Tour concerts breathes new life into the country s reputation in terms of tourism. Cheen said the ripple effect of the tour makes them look “modern, open-minded, and vibrant” Experts say the country’s tourism levels are rising, reaching about 80% of pre-pandemic levels.

The level of spending, engagement, viewership and overall impact that Taylor Swift ha generated continues to reach unexplored heights, and it’s clear that many corporations and countries have profited off her global appeal.

1. Why does the author include so many figures in Paragraphs 2- 3?
A.To discuss Taylor Swift’s musical achievements.
B.To highlight the global popularity of Taylor Swift.
C.To showcase the diversity of Taylor Swift’s fanbase.
D.To emphasize the economic impact of Taylor Swift’s tour.
2. What does the underlined word “leg” in Paragraph 3 mean?
A.Part.B.Performance.C.Stage.D.Impact.
3. What effect has Taylor Swift’s tour had on Singapore?
A.Putting an end to the pandemic.B.Restoring its tourism reputation.
C.Reshaping its entertainment image.D.Boosting its pre-pandemic economy.
4. What is the best title of the passage?
A.Taylor Swift: An award-winning Musician
B.The Eras Tour: An influential Global Concert .
C.Swiftonomics: The Global Impact of Taylor Swift
D.Swift Impact: Transforming Singapore’s Tourism Reputation
2024-05-03更新 | 49次组卷 | 1卷引用:湖南省三湘名校教育联盟2023-2024学年高二下学期4月期中英语试题
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。主要介绍了艺术家诺曼·洛克威尔的创作天赋及艺术价值。

9 . Norman Rockwell didn’t create his celebrated images using only brush and paint. They often took shape first as scenes that Rockwell literally acted out, not only for his editors at the Saturday Evening Post, but for his real-life models, too. “It was difficult,” he once explained, “but I felt it was the best way to get across my meaning.” And so he would enthusiastically play out his visions and ideas, a one-man show packed with just the right expressions, giving enough details of each character in the scene to inspire his models and more importantly, get his editors to buy his ideas.

Now, more than 30 years after his death, Rockwell is still acknowledged for skillfully documenting the best of 20th century American life with drawings of simple emotions inspired by everyday people. To create his detailed recollections of everyday American life, Rockwell worked much like a film director, not just acting out the scenes in his imagination, but looking for locations, casting everyday people from his town for particular parts.

The recognition he received strongly proves Rockwell’s superior skills as a storyteller and is the subject of another kind of one-man show: the upcoming exhibition at the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, D.C., titled Telling Stories: Norman Rockwell from the Collections of George Lucas and Steven Spielberg. The exhibit, gathered together from the private collections of these two popular film directors, will feature rarely viewed pieces of Rockwell’s artworks.

That concentration of information as well as emotion is something essential in Rockwell’s art. Emotion certainly spoke to Steven Spielberg when he first saw one of his favorite Rockwell paintings, High Dive, the August 16, 1947 Post cover that describes a boy at the top of what must be a towering diving board. He crouches (蹲伏) high above a swimming pool, too afraid to either jump or climb back down. The painting hangs in Spielberg’s office at Amblin Entertainment because it holds a great deal of meaning for the filmmaker.

1. How did Norman Rockwell successfully influence his editors?
A.By performing his ideas.B.By hiring more models.
C.By donating his paintings.D.By drawing actual events.
2. What were the subjects of Rockwell’s works?
A.Film directors.B.Folk storytellers.
C.Natural landscapes.D.Ordinary citizens.
3. What may the boy in the painting High Dive inspire the viewers to do?
A.Develop artistic skills.B.Learn how to act out.
C.Appreciate nature.D.learn to swim.
4. What is the author’s purpose in writing the text?
A.To introduce an exhibit.B.To recommend a painting.
C.To remember an artist.D.To explain a cultural phenomenon.
2024-04-28更新 | 101次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届河北省高三大数据应用调研联合测评 (六)
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文章大意:本文是记叙文。文章主要介绍了国画大师齐白石先生的生平和成就及其对后世的影响。

10 . During the 19th and 20th centuries, Qi Baishi (1864-1957) was one of the best-known Chinese artists. He grew up in a poor peasant family, but this did not prevent him from pursuing his interest in painting.

Qi was schooled for less than a year due to illness, and he dropped out of school. However, he was too weak to do much of the work and this was why he became a carpenter. As a carpenter, he showed his creativity. He could carve figures of animals, woodblock prints, and sniff-boxes. At the age of 20, he taught himself to paint with Mustard Seed Garden Manual of Painting. He met many mentors who greatly influenced his painting skills through his painting journey, among whom are the renowned artists Zhu Da and Xu Wei. When he was 28, he became a student of the famous artist Hu Qinyuan, and he began to study Chinese painting.

Qi arrived in Beijing in 1917. While he was in Beijing, he stayed devoted to painting. Most of his paintings represented Chinese tradition. Qi’s works are now found in several famous museums, including National Gallery Prague and the Hermitage in St. Petersburg. His works now are the most expensive ever sold at auctions.

Qi got noticed by many institutions, one of which is the Ministry of Culture. In 1954 he was selected as the representative of the Chinese people. Also, in 1956, he was awarded the World Peace Prize by World Peace Council. A college was also named after him, the Baishi School of Art in Hunan University of Science Technology.

1. Why did Qi Baishi drop out of school?
A.He suffered from illness and was too weak.
B.He wanted to devote himself to painting.
C.He wasn’t interested in what he learned at school.
D.His family was too poor to afford his schooling fees.
2. According to the passage, which of the statements is TRUE?
A.He learned Chinese painting on his own.
B.He showed great creativity of art since childhood.
C.His works are one of the costliest ever sold at auctions.
D.At first he learned to paint from some renowned artists.
3. What does the last paragraph mainly tell us about Qi Baishi?
A.His painting style.B.His painting works.
C.His achievements.D.His contributions to his hometown.
4. How does the author mainly develop the text?
A.By giving examples.B.By using data.
C.By raising questions.D.By following the order of time.
共计 平均难度:一般