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AP Art History Cheat Sheet 2026

AP Art History Must memorize — no sheet provided 250 required works Updated July 2026

The 10 Required Content Areas — Exam Weight

Content Area% of ExamKey TimeframeRepresentative Works / Cultures
1. Global Prehistory4%c. 30,000–500 BCELascaux caves, Venus of Willendorf, Stonehenge, Neolithic pottery
2. Ancient Mediterranean15%c. 3500 BCE–300 CEEgyptian, Greek, Roman, Etruscan, Near Eastern art and architecture
3. Early Europe & Colonial Americas12%c. 200–1750 CEEarly Christian, Byzantine, Romanesque, Gothic, Northern Renaissance
4. Later Europe & Americas20%c. 1750–1980 CEItalian Renaissance, Baroque, Neoclassicism, Romanticism, Impressionism, Modernism
5. Indigenous Americas6%c. 1000 BCE–1980 CEOlmec, Maya, Aztec, Inca, North American native traditions
6. Africa6%c. 650–1980 CEGreat Zimbabwe, Benin bronzes, Kongo, Yoruba, Dogon
7. West & Central Asia4%c. 3500 BCE–1980 CEMesopotamian, Achaemenid, Islamic architecture, calligraphy, manuscripts
8. South, East & Southeast Asia8%c. 2600 BCE–1980 CEIndus Valley, Hindu temples, Buddhist art, Chinese scroll painting, Japanese architecture
9. The Pacific4%c. 700–1980 CEPolynesian navigational charts, Hawaiian featherwork, Australian Aboriginal art
10. Global Contemporary11%c. 1980–presentSite-specific installation, diaspora art, global exchange, postcolonial critique
Pro tip: Content Areas 2 (Ancient Med) and 4 (Later Europe) together make up 35% of the exam — prioritize these without ignoring global content, which now accounts for 43%.

Formal Analysis — Visual Elements

7 Elements of Art

  • Line: Implied, contour, expressive; conveys direction and emotion
  • Shape/Form: 2D (shape) vs. 3D (form); geometric vs. organic
  • Space: Positive (objects) vs. negative (empty); pictorial depth
  • Color: Hue, value, saturation; warm vs. cool; symbolic meaning
  • Value: Lightness/darkness; chiaroscuro, sfumato, tenebrism
  • Texture: Actual (tactile) vs. implied (visual)
  • Light: Natural vs. artificial; light source direction; shadows

Principles of Design

  • Balance: Symmetrical (formal) vs. asymmetrical (dynamic)
  • Emphasis/Focal point: Where the eye is drawn first
  • Rhythm/Pattern: Repetition creating movement
  • Unity/Variety: Coherence vs. visual interest
  • Proportion/Scale: Hierarchical scale = importance, not reality

Key Art History Terms

  • Iconography: Study of symbols and their meanings in art
  • Iconoclasm: Destruction of religious images (Byzantine, Reformation)
  • Contrapposto: Weight shift — one hip raised, naturalistic stance (Greek, Renaissance)
  • Chiaroscuro: Strong light-dark contrast (Baroque — Caravaggio)
  • Sfumato: Soft, smoky blurring of edges (Leonardo da Vinci)
  • Foreshortening: Objects shortened to create illusion of depth
  • Vanishing point: Point where parallel lines converge (linear perspective)
  • Patron/Patronage: Person or institution commissioning a work
  • Ekphrasis: Written description of a work of visual art
  • Trompe l'oeil: "Deceive the eye" — hyperrealistic illusion
  • Syncretic: Blending of two or more traditions/styles
  • Provenance: History of ownership of an artwork

Architecture & Structure Terms

  • Post-and-lintel: Horizontal beam (lintel) resting on vertical posts — Greek temples
  • Arch: Curved stone; distributes weight to piers/walls
  • Barrel vault: Extended arch; heavy walls needed — Romanesque
  • Groin (cross) vault: Two barrel vaults intersecting — Roman, Romanesque
  • Ribbed vault: Stone ribs direct weight; allows larger windows — Gothic
  • Flying buttress: External arch takes lateral thrust; enables Gothic height
  • Dome: Rotating arch; pendentives transition to square base
  • Orders: Doric (simple), Ionic (scroll volutes), Corinthian (acanthus)
  • Entasis: Slight column bulge for optical correction — Greek temples
  • Hypostyle hall: Many columns supporting a flat roof — Egyptian temples
  • Muqarnas: Honeycomb-like stalactite decoration — Islamic architecture
  • Ziggurat: Stepped Mesopotamian temple platform

Western Art Movements — Timeline & Key Characteristics

Period/MovementDatesKey CharacteristicsKey Artists/Works
Ancient Greekc. 900–31 BCEIdealized human form; contrapposto; orders (Doric/Ionic/Corinthian)Parthenon; Doryphoros (Spear-Bearer); Dying Gaul
Romanc. 509 BCE–476 CEVeristic portraiture; arches/vaults/domes; triumphal monuments; propagandaPantheon; Colosseum; Column of Trajan; Augustus of Prima Porta
Early Christian & Byzantinec. 300–1453 CEHieratic scale; gold background; frontal figures; mosaics; spiritual over naturalHagia Sophia; San Vitale mosaics; Virgin (Theotokos) icons
Romanesquec. 1000–1200Round arches; thick walls; barrel vaults; pilgrimage churches; tympanum sculptureSaint-Foy at Conques; Last Judgment tympanum; Bayeux Tapestry
Gothicc. 1140–1400Pointed arches; ribbed vaults; flying buttresses; stained glass; verticalityNotre-Dame de Paris; Chartres Cathedral; Sainte-Chapelle
Italian Renaissancec. 1400–1600Linear perspective; humanism; classical revival; idealized naturalismBotticelli's Birth of Venus; Leonardo's Last Supper; Michelangelo's Sistine Ceiling; Raphael
Northern Renaissancec. 1430–1580Oil paint; minute detail; symbolic everyday objects; portraiture; Protestant themesvan Eyck's Arnolfini Portrait; Dürer self-portraits; Bruegel's peasant scenes
Mannerismc. 1520–1600Elongated figures; unusual colors; complex poses; anti-classicalPontormo; Rosso Fiorentino; Parmigianino
Baroquec. 1600–1750Drama; movement; chiaroscuro; emotion; Counter-Reformation + absolutist patronageCaravaggio; Bernini; Rubens; Rembrandt; Velázquez
Rocococ. 1700–1780Light, playful, decorative; pastels; aristocratic leisure scenesWatteau's fêtes galantes; Boucher; Fragonard; Tiepolo
Neoclassicismc. 1750–1850Return to Greek/Roman virtues; clarity; moral subjects; Enlightenment valuesDavid's Death of Marat, Oath of the Horatii; Canova sculptures
Romanticismc. 1800–1870Emotion; sublime nature; nationalism; exotic subjects; individual geniusGéricault's Raft of the Medusa; Delacroix; Friedrich; Turner; Goya
Realismc. 1840–1880Working class subjects; direct observation; rejection of idealizationCourbet; Millet; Daumier; Manet's Olympia
Impressionismc. 1860–1890Loose brushwork; light effects; modern life; painting outdoors (en plein air)Monet; Renoir; Degas; Cassatt; Pissarro
Post-Impressionismc. 1880–1910Diverse responses to Impressionism: structure, color theory, expression, symbolismCézanne; Seurat (pointillism); Van Gogh; Gauguin
Modernismc. 1905–1970Break from tradition; abstraction; new materials; multiple movements (below)Picasso, Matisse, Mondrian, Pollock, Warhol
Postmodernismc. 1970–presentAppropriation; deconstruction; identity politics; blurring high/low cultureCindy Sherman; Barbara Kruger; Jeff Koons; global contemporary artists

20th-Century Modern Art Movements

MovementDatesKey IdeaKey Artists
Fauvismc. 1905–10Intense unmixed color for emotional expression; "wild beasts"Matisse, Derain
Expressionismc. 1905–25Distortion and color to express inner emotion; often anguishKirchner, Nolde, Marc; Munch (precursor)
Cubismc. 1907–20Multiple viewpoints simultaneously; geometric fragmentationPicasso, Braque; Analytic (gray) vs. Synthetic (collage)
Futurismc. 1909–14Speed, technology, motion; glorified industry and violenceBoccioni, Balla (Italy)
Dadac. 1916–23Anti-art; absurdist reaction to WWI; readymades; chance operationsDuchamp, Heartfield, Schwitters, Höch
Surrealismc. 1924–45Dreams and unconscious; irrational imagery; Freudian influenceDalí, Magritte, Ernst, Kahlo (associated)
De Stijlc. 1917–30Pure abstraction; primary colors + black/white; vertical/horizontal onlyMondrian, van Doesburg
Bauhausc. 1919–33Form follows function; art + craft + design unified; machine aestheticsGropius (founder), Klee, Kandinsky, Albers
Abstract Expressionismc. 1940s–50sGesture, emotion, large-scale abstraction; New York SchoolPollock (action), Rothko/Newman (color field), de Kooning
Pop Artc. 1955–70Mass culture, advertising, consumer goods; irony and appropriationWarhol, Lichtenstein (USA); Hamilton, Hockney (UK)
Minimalismc. 1960–75Reduce to pure form; industrial materials; viewer completes the workJudd, Morris, Andre, Serra
Conceptual Artc. 1965–80Idea is the artwork; dematerialization; process and documentationLeWitt, Kosuth, Weiner

AP Art History FRQ Types

Section II — 6 FRQs (2 hrs)

  • Long Essay (1): Compare and contrast two works from different cultures/periods — 8 pts; 30 min
  • Short Essay (4): Visual/contextual analysis, attribution, comparison — 4 pts each; ~15 min each
  • Unknown Image Analysis (1): Works NOT from the 250 — analyze using style and context clues

FRQ Writing Framework

  • Identify: Title, artist, date, culture/period
  • Describe: What you see — formal elements (subject, medium, scale, composition)
  • Analyze: How formal elements create meaning — use evidence from the work
  • Contextualize: Historical, cultural, religious, political context
  • Compare: Similarities AND differences with specific evidence from both works
Key rule: Always tie formal observations to meaning. Don't just say "the figures are large" — say "the hierarchical scale of the central figure emphasizes its divine importance within a religious context."

Exam Format Summary

Section I — Multiple Choice (2.5 hrs)

  • 80 multiple-choice questions
  • Image-based sets (8–10 sets, 2–5 questions each)
  • Individual questions (mixed)
  • Questions about attribution, context, comparison, material/process

Section II — FRQ (2 hrs)

  • 6 free-response questions total
  • 1 long essay (compare/contrast) — ~30 min
  • 4 short essays — ~15 min each
  • 1 unknown image analysis — ~15 min

Score Breakdown

  • Section I (MCQ): 50% of score
  • Section II (FRQ): 50% of score
  • Long essay: 8 pts; short essays: 4 pts each; unknown: 4 pts

Global / Non-Western Key Works to Know

Africa

  • Benin Bronzes — royal ancestor commemoration; lost-wax casting; Nigeria
  • Great Zimbabwe — stone enclosure; political power; 11th–15th c.
  • Kuba royal portrait (ndop) — abstracted; embodied spirit of king

Americas (Indigenous)

  • Colossal Olmec heads — monumental; basalt; identity of rulers
  • Templo Mayor (Aztec) — cosmological axis mundi; sacrificial
  • Chavín de Huántar — Andean; oracle center; Staff God iconography

Asia

  • Great Stupa at Sanchi — Buddhist hemispherical mound; reliquary
  • Borobudur — Buddhist; Java; stepped pyramid; 72 stupas
  • Forbidden City (Beijing) — imperial palace; cosmic order; symmetrical axis
  • Taj Mahal — Mughal; mausoleum; perfect symmetry; white marble

Islam

  • Dome of the Rock (Jerusalem) — first major Islamic monument; octagonal
  • Great Mosque of Córdoba — hypostyle hall; horseshoe arches; Umayyad
  • Alhambra Palace — Nasrid; muqarnas; inscribed poetry on walls
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