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Re: In the Victorian era, critics tended to view the art of the Italian [#permalink]
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This passage is a wild animal. Very intricated

Now, C is wrong because the democracies issue in the very end is just a detail. The second question is more related to the big picture of the passage as a whole

1) In the Victorian era, critics tended to view the art of the Italian Renaissance through the prism of Enlightenment views about the role of the individual in the context of humanism

2) However, recent scholarship on the subject has emphasized that the major works of Renaissance art seek to do more than simply extol the virtues of humanism.

3) modern critics stress that their works also sought to glorify the principles underlying Christianity and the Roman Catholic Church, which commissioned a number of the most impressive works of the Renaissance.

4) Andrew Graham-Dixon published a book reviewing the Renaissance and the ideas behind it that supported the idea that these works were meant to convey more complex messages about humanism and its relationship to religion than imagined by many 19th century critics.

5) The main problem with assessing the validity of critical appraisals such as Graham-Dixon’s is that it is difficult to analyze the multiple levels of meaning in major Renaissance artworks through the prism of contemporary issues.

From the excerpts above you must connect the dots.

Now: victorian said X

The modern said x+y

An example is a book by Graham-Dixon

however, point five, BOTH - and the book of Dixon is a clear example because he was a modern critic of the era (this is the key of the entire story to understand the second question) had a problem: Renaissance artworks through the prism of contemporary issues

B) both are prone to the tendency to interpret the art of the past through the lens of current concerns

B is the answer

Hope this helps
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Re: In the Victorian era, critics tended to view the art of the Italian [#permalink]
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+1 Kudos to posts containing answer explanation of all questions
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Re: In the Victorian era, critics tended to view the art of the Italian [#permalink]
question 1 why not option A?
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Re: In the Victorian era, critics tended to view the art of the Italian [#permalink]
Please provide an explanation for Q1?
How is it mentioned that modern writers were more nuanced in their critique of Renaissance artwork?
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In the Victorian era, critics tended to view the art of the Italian [#permalink]
Can someone explain why the answer of Q2 is not C?

And why is the answer B? Where is it mentioned that victorian era critics interpreted renaissance art through current lens??

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In the Victorian era, critics tended to view the art of the Italian [#permalink]
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