AHS FINAL 2026
MODERN & CONTEMPORARY ART
EXAM QUESTIONS & ANSWERS
WITH COMPLETE SOLUTIONS · VERIFIED · LATEST UPDATE · GRADED A+
✅ All key answers highlighted in YELLOW for easy studying
✅ Full artwork images included throughout
✅ Organized by topic with key terms defined
Topics Covered:
1. Art as Labor & Work
2. Feminist Art & Gender in Museums
3. Race, Identity & Alternative Spaces
4. Spectacle, Images & Media
5. Biennials & Global Art Exhibitions
6. Capital, Economy & Art Markets
7. Museums: Funding, Access & the Imaginary
All answers highlighted in yellow for easy review | Page 1
,AHS FINAL 2026 — MODERN & CONTEMPORARY ART EXAM | GRADED A+
SECTION 1: ART AS LABOR & WORK
This section covers theories about art-making as a form of labor and the political economy of artistic
production.
Sharon Lockhart — Close Look (1999)
Sharon Lockhart, Enrique Nava, National Museum of Anthropology, 1999
Q: What is Sharon Lockhart's 'Close Look' about?
✓ ANSWER: A photographic series documenting a museum guard at the National Museum of
Anthropology in Mexico City (1999), exploring the intersection of labor, observation, and museum
work — the guard as worker within an art institution.
Karl Marx — Labor Theory
Q: What are the key components of Marx's theory of labor as applied to art?
✓ ANSWER: Personal activity of man + subject of work + instruments = final product. Activity
changes the world with tools. The consumer only sees the final product, not the labor. Raw
materials + work + tools = final product. The fixed product has no movement — we don't think about
the labor that went into it.
Subject of Work: The raw material that labor acts upon
Instruments of Labor: The tools used in production
Final Product: Result — static, conceals the labor process
Julia Wilson — Feminist Labor Theory
Q: What did Julia Wilson argue about domestic labor and art?
✓ ANSWER: Wilson categorized house chores as work — challenging the devaluation of domestic
labor. She examined the 'end of devalued labor' and argued that feminist art practice should
recognize and elevate overlooked forms of work, particularly those performed by women.
Key Artworks: Labor & Work
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, AHS FINAL 2026 — MODERN & CONTEMPORARY ART EXAM | GRADED A+
Mierle Laderman Ukeles — Art Workers' Coalition — 13 Demands (1969)
Washing/Tracks/Maintenance (1973) The AWC demanded artists' rights including:
Ukeles performed maintenance labor (mopping, royalties on resales, free museum admission, control
cleaning) in galleries as art, arguing that over exhibition of their work, and inclusion of
maintenance work is invisible but essential — and minority and women artists in museum shows.
should be recognized as artistic and socially
valuable labor.
Art Workers Coalition — Q: And Babies? A: And Puerto Rican Art Workers Coalition (1970)
Babies (1969) Organized to demand representation and
An anti-Vietnam War poster protesting the My Lai recognition for Puerto Rican artists in New York
Massacre. The AWC used the image of dead cultural institutions — an intersectional extension of
Vietnamese civilians to challenge MoMA and other the art workers movement.
institutions to take a political stand.
Sharon Lockhart — Lunch Break Installation (2008)
Q: What does Lockhart's Lunch Break Installation explore?
✓ ANSWER: A film installation documenting workers during their lunch break at a shipyard in Bath,
Maine. It explores work, labor, rest, and time — using slow cinema to give equal attention to
working-class experience that is usually invisible in art contexts.
Artists Union & Federal Art Project
Q: What was the Artists Union (1933–1942) and the Works Progress Administration Federal
Art Project (1935–1943)?
✓ ANSWER: The Artists Union was a labor union for artists during the Great Depression,
advocating for government support of artists. The WPA Federal Art Project (1935–1943) employed
artists to create public murals, posters, and artworks — the largest government arts employment
program in US history.
Hito Steyerl — 'Is the Museum a Factory?' (2009)
Q: What is Hito Steyerl's argument in 'Is the Museum a Factory?'
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