Art Section III: Exploration and Empire/The North-West Passage

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Last updated 11:14 PM on 7/4/26
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86 Terms

1
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What happened in 1492?

Christopher Columbus landed in the Caribbean

2
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Where did Columbus embark from and where was he trying to go?

Spain to Asia

3
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What happened as a consequence of Columbus' journey?

Centuries of colonization and cultural exchange

4
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Which countries tried to control resources in the New World?

France, Spain, England, and Portugal

5
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How was art an important part of imperial projects?

It prompted exploration of territories, presented national narratives, and reflects on the legacies of global expansion

6
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What change was caused by the construction of the Panama Canal?

It allowed ships to pass through the narrowest point of Central America

7
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What did European sailors do centuries before the Panama Canal was created?

They searched for a shorter water route from the Atlantic to Pacific Ocean

8
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Where did Europeans think the alternate route would be?

North of Canada

9
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What was the longer route to go from the Atlantic to the Pacific?

Sailing around Cape Horn at the tip of South America

10
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What was the potential shorter route called?

Northwest Passage

11
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Why did Britain want to find the Northwest Passage?

It would enable traders to purchase goods from Asia quickly

12
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What did Inuit oral traditions reveal?

There was a water route that could be traversed by canoe

13
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Who was Martin Frobisher?

The first British explorer who tried to find the Northwest Passage

14
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When did Frobisher set sail?

In the 1570s

15
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How many times did Frobisher fail?

3 times

16
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What does the painting The North-West Passage depict?

The hope and tragedy that the search for the Northwest passage represented for Britons

17
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Where and when was Sir John Everett Millais born?

Southampton in 1829

18
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What did Millais achieve when he was 11?

He became the youngest student ever accepted to the Royal Academy of Art

19
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Why was the Royal Academy of Art significant?

It had been the premier location for young British and American artists to learn painting and drawing since 1768

20
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When did Millais make his debut and at what event?

1846 at the annual Academy exhibition

21
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What was Millais' initial work for exhibit?

Pizarro Seizing the Inca of Peru

22
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Who did Millais meet at the Royal Academy?

William Holman Hunt

23
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Besides Millais and Hunt, what other painter formed the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood?

Dante Gabriel Rossetti

24
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When was the Brotherhood formed?

1848

25
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What exactly was the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood?

A group of progressive young English artists who rejected the Academy's teachings

26
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What did the Brotherhood's name refer to?

The desire to return art to a time before the High Renaissance embodied by Raphael Sanzio

27
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What did the Brotherhood think about Renaissance art?

It was too formulaic and idealizing

28
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What aspects of Renaissance art did the Brotherhood reject?

Linear perspective and Renaissance proportion

29
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What aesthetic did the Brotherhood favor?

A quasi-medieval aesthetic that included minute detail and saturated color

30
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How did the Brotherhood reject idealism?

They used close observation, represented things as they really appeared, and did not shy away from imperfection, age, or decay

31
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When was the work of the Brotherhood first exhibited?

1848

32
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What was the Brotherhood;s art criticized for?

Awkward and flat-looking figures, unusual color choices, and un-idealized details

33
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Who was a prominent supporter of the Pre-Raphaelite movement?

John Ruskin, the most influential nineteenth century art critic

34
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What is one of Millais' most well-known works of the Pre-Raphaelite style?

Ophelia (1852)

35
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How did Millais' art style change later in his career?

It went from highly detailed to more brushy and loose

36
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What did Millais receive in 1885?

A baronetcy from Queen Victoria

37
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What did Millais achieve in 1896?

He was elected President of the Royal Academy

38
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What does The North-West Passage reference?

Britain's naval power and its main character's experience as a sailor

39
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Who is depicted in the painting?

An older man sitting at a desk and a young woman on a low stool beneath him

40
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What can be seen through the window?

A sailboat passing by the house in calm waters

41
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What is on the table?

Books and papers, a glass of spirits, a telescope, and a dish holding a lemon

42
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What would the lemon be a reference to?

Sailors replenishing vitamin C with fresh fruit

43
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Who is depicted in the framed print?

Admiral Horatio Nelson

44
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Who was Horatio Nelson?

A major naval commander during the Napoleonic Wars

45
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What is depicted in the other framed image?

A painting of a ship crossing an Arctic sea

46
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What partially covers the painting of the ship?

The British flag and a white naval ensign flag

47
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What is the man in the painting looking away from?

A Portolan chart of the Canadian coastline

48
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What might the girl be reading?

A maritime log

49
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What themes and historical references can be seen in The North-West Passage?

A family drama of loss and worry and historical issues of empire and exploration

50
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Where and when did The North-West Passage debut?

The Royal Academy in 1874

51
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What exhibition was the painting a part of?

The English art exhibition at the 1878 Paris world's fair

52
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What gallery acquired the painting and when?

The National Gallery of British Art in 1897

53
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How did Alison Smith describe the painting?

One of the defining images of British imperial heroism

54
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What signal flag message did Admiral Nelson famously send?

England expects that every man will do his duty

55
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In which battle did Nelson die?

Battle of Trafalgar

56
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Who was the model for the old mariner in the painting?

Edward John Trelawney

57
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What was Trelawney's background?

He was a veteran of the Royal Navy and served at Trafalgar

58
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What elements of the painting set a patriotic tone?

The image of Nelson and the flags in the upper right

59
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What did John Guille Millais write regarding the painting?

It was an eloquent expression of the nation's desire to reveal the mystery of the North

60
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Why did finding the Northwest Passage become increasingly important for Britain?

The British Empire expanded in the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries

61
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What stories prompted exploration voyages?

Stories of a sea route through the small islands of the north Canadian archipelago

62
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What disaster happened in 1845?

The Admiralty lost touch with an expedition led by Sir John Franklin

63
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Who was Sir John Franklin?

An experienced colonial administrator and explorer

64
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What had happened to the expedition?

The HMS Erebus and HMS Terror got trapped in polar ice and were abandoned by their crews

65
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What did search parties fail to find?

The remains of the ships or the survivors

66
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What was the widely reported outcome of the expedition by 1854?

All 129 men on the mission had died

67
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What did the failed expedition lead to?

Many plays, poems, popular songs, and major works of art

68
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What work did Edwin Landseer exhibit?

Man Proposes, God Disposes (1864)

69
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What did Man Proposes, God Disposes depict?

Polar bears in the wreckage of a sailing ship

70
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What play did Charles Dickens and Wilkie Collins write?

The Frozen Deep (1856)

71
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What short story did Sir Arthur Conan Doyle publish in 1883?

The Captain of the 'Pole-Star'

72
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What was The Captain of the 'Pole-Star' about?

A ship that becomes trapped in polar ice

73
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What are the father and daughter in The North-West Passage concerned about?

The fate of a loved one who has not yet returned from his mission

74
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What details suggest the danger of global exploration?

The framed image of a ship in ice and the old sailor's haunted stare

75
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How did contemporary viewers feel about the Northwest Passage?

They were in favor of the search for the Passage

76
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What was the caption for the Royal Academy catalog entry for the painting?

It might be done, and England should do it

77
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When did another Arctic expedition occur?

1875

78
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Who led the 1875 expedition?

George Strong Nares

79
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How was Millais involved in the expedition?

He met the sailors before they departed

80
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When did the first non-Inuit person successfully navigate the Northwest Passage by water?

1905

81
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Who discovered the Northwest Passage?

Roald Amundsen

82
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What was Amundsen's nationality?

Norwegian

83
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What does Millais' painting make plain?

Sacrifices would be necessary to cement British naval dominance in a globalizing and interconnected world

84
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What did the painting represent?

A statement of British naval power and a positive view of the possibilities of colonial exploration

85
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What did Millais fail to do, along with most of his English peers?

Consider issue of colonization from the perspective of the colonized

86
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What have artists from the former British Empire done in the twenty-first century?

Push back on colonial narratives and inquire about the legacies of the British Empire