Pearson Revel Test 1 Practice Exam

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Why might contemporary artists use artificial lighting in installations?

Light can radiate into the viewer's space

It reduces production costs

Contemporary installations rely on a controlled lighting design to shape what viewers experience. Artificial lighting gives exact control over brightness, color, direction, and timing, so the artist can craft a precise, repeatable look no matter where the work is shown. That predictability is especially valuable in production: a lighting rig can be designed, tested, and transported once and reused across multiple venues, which can lower setup time and overall costs. In practice, this means the installation can be prepared to meet budget constraints without sacrificing the intended effect.

The other ideas aren’t as strong a fit. Light entering the viewer’s space is a natural byproduct rather than the main aim of using artificial lighting, and artificial lighting doesn’t inherently eliminate shadows—shadows are often an intentional part of an installation’s composition. Maintenance can also be involved with artificial systems, rather than being automatically simplified.

It eliminates shadows

It simplifies maintenance

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