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akhp77
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Though formerly

by akhp77 Wed May 19, 2010 5:02 am

Source: MGMAT Q Bank

Though formerly considered ill-formed and primitive, Henri Rousseau has become an iconic figure of Post-Impressionism for his dream-like canvases painted like he was naive.

A: Henri Rousseau has become an iconic figure of Post-Impressionism for his dream-like canvases painted like he was naive.
B: Henri Rousseau's canvases, painted in a naive, dream-like style, later established the artist as an icon of Post-Impressionism.
C: Henri Rousseau painted canvases in a naive, dream-like style that has become an icon of Post-Impressionism.
D: Henri Rousseau's canvases were painted in a naive, dream-like style that was later iconic of Post-Impressionism.
E: the canvases of Henri Rousseau are icons of Post-Impressionism due to being painted in a naive, dream-like style.

OA: B
I have eliminated A and C because of modifier issue. What about others?
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Re: Though formerly

by tim Sun Jun 27, 2010 2:18 am

In D, the paintings were not later iconic of Post-Impressionism; they were iconic of that period when they were painted, even if it was only recognized as such at a later date..

In E, you would not talk of something being an icon "due to being" anything. The "being" in this case conveys a sense of present tense that we don't want. We should instead have something like "due to their having been"..
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Re: Though formerly

by contactshobhit Mon Jun 27, 2011 9:42 am

In correct choice B, how do we break the sentence into S-V

Henri Rousseau's canvases, painted in a naive, dream-like style, later established the artist as an icon of Post-Impressionism

So main sentence is
Henri Rousseau's canvases later established the artist as an icon of Post-Impressionism

and "painted in a naive, dream-like style" is modifier.

Shouldn't we have "and" in list ...naive and dream-like ?
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Re: Though formerly

by contactshobhit Wed Jun 29, 2011 11:30 pm

Any expert comment or comments from fellow gmatters
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Re: Though formerly

by jnelson0612 Sat Jul 16, 2011 11:50 pm

contactshobhit Wrote:In correct choice B, how do we break the sentence into S-V

Henri Rousseau's canvases, painted in a naive, dream-like style, later established the artist as an icon of Post-Impressionism

So main sentence is
Henri Rousseau's canvases later established the artist as an icon of Post-Impressionism

and "painted in a naive, dream-like style" is modifier.

Shouldn't we have "and" in list ...naive and dream-like ?


The "canvases" are the subject and "established" is the verb.

We do not need an "and" between "naive, dream-like". Two adjectives with a comma between them followed by a noun are acceptable.
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Re: Though formerly

by peter_griffin Mon Sep 17, 2012 11:15 am

B: Henri Rousseau's canvases, painted in a naive, dream-like style, later established the artist as an icon of Post-Impressionism.

Can "artist" refer back to "Henri Rousseau" . I thought when we have possessive like "Henri Rousseau's canvases" it cannot serve as an antecedent .

PL clarify.
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Re: Though formerly

by tim Thu Sep 27, 2012 1:25 am

"artist" is not a pronoun. you cannot apply a pronoun rule to something that is not a pronoun..
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Re: Though formerly

by hiteshwd Sat Dec 08, 2012 9:09 am

tim Wrote:"artist" is not a pronoun. you cannot apply a pronoun rule to something that is not a pronoun..



The explaination given is as:

The original sentence begins with a modifier ("though formerly considered ill-formed and primitive") that logically addresses Rousseau's art, rather than Rousseau himself, as the original sentence states. Moreover, the use of "like" in the phrase "painted like he was naive" is incorrect; correct usage might be "as if he was naive" (although this is only one way to correct the sentence).



Just wanted to confirm, whether "as if he was naive" would have been correct or "as if he were naive"
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Re: Though formerly

by tim Sun Dec 23, 2012 2:43 pm

"were" is preferred here, as we are dealing with the subjunctive..
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Re: Though formerly

by RahulB486 Thu Oct 13, 2016 11:56 pm

Hi,
I have a couple of questions about the correct answer which reads:
"Though formerly considered ill-formed and primitive, Henri Rousseau's canvases, painted in a naive, dream-like style, later established the artist as an icon of Post-Impressionism."

The main clause as mentioned in the thread above is "H R's canvases established...". Isn't a comma -ed word, like a comma-ing word, an adverbial modifier. In this case ",painted in a naive , dream like style" is modifying just the noun H R's canvases and not the entire clause. Therefore isn't the use of a comma-ed modifier incorrect? Shouldn't it read something like:
"Though formerly considered ill-formed and primitive, Henri Rousseau's canvases, which were painted in a naive, dream-like style, later established the artist as an icon of Post-Impressionism."?

Thanks