Neoclassicism
Monticello
The US Capitol
George Washington
Forever Free
200

In France, Neoclassicism emerged in the decades leading up to this major historical event

French Revolution

200

Prior to eventually becoming president of the US, Jefferson served as governor of this state

Virginia

200

The name of the statue that sits atop the US Capitol

Statue of Freedom
200

The presidential monument of George Washington, with its marble statue and granite base, weights these many tons

12 tons

200

Edmonia Lewis eventually settled in this Italian city

Rome

400

In France, the Neoclassical style was a direct challenge to this art style, known for its associations with the aristocracy

Rococo

400
From the top of the hill on which Monticello is situated, one can enjoy the view of these surrounding mountains

Blue Ridge Mountains

400

An art term that refers to a long row of columns that supports a roof and/or creates an arcade

colonnade

400

Relief sculptures on the sides of the throne depict Hercules as an infant and this Greek Sun god

Apollo

400

Lewis's mother was a member of the Ojibwa tribe, also known by this name

Chippewa

600

His Oath of the Horatii illustrated republican virtues

Jacques Louis David

600

In addition to Monticello, Thomas Jefferson designed the University of Virginia in this city

Charlottesville

600

The Corinthian columns designed by Benjamin Latrobe replaced the traditional acanthus leaves for corncobs and this crop

tobacco

600

While George Washington's right hand is pointed toward the heavens, his left hand holds this object

a sword in its sheath

600

This was the original title of Forever Free 

The Morning of Liberty

800

Later in his career, Jacques Louis David became a dedicated painter to this French leader

Napoleon Bonaparte

800

These are boxes on pulleys, hidden within cabinets and behind doors, used to transport food and drink between multiple floors

dumbwaiters

800

The year in which a historic marker made from sandstone quarried by slaves was installed in the US Capitol to acknowledge the contributions of enslaved workers

2012

800

These were bundles of rods intended to symbolize power and authority in Ancient Rome

fasces

800

This was the 19th-century American societal standard that emphasized women's domesticity, piety, purity, and submissiveness above all other qualities

Cult of true womanhood

1000

The Grande Odalisque is the best-known work of this pupil of Jacques Louis David

Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres

1000

This is the art term meaning the exterior or face of a building

façade

1000

This is the artist whose two relief works are installed above the doorways of the rotunda: The Landing of the Pilgrims; and The Conflict of Daniel Boone and the Indians

Enrico Causici

1000

The 1806 portrait, Napoleon on his Imperial Throne, was painted by this French artist

Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres

1000

Lewis's statue Old Arrow Maker is based on "The Song of Hiawatha", an epic poem by this writer

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow