Although you never explicitly stated such in the body of your message, I can infer from your title that
an is meant to be an arithmetic sequence. With that in mind, we can use what you (should) already know about arithmetic sequences: They have some starting value and then each successive term is some common difference more/less than the previous term.
We're given that
a4=−1 but we're not told a common difference. Hmm... well, the most important principle in all of algebra is that if we don't know a value, we can give that value a name so as to make talking about it and working with it easier. Let
d be the common difference of the sequence
an. Can you see why that means we can say that
a4=a3+d⟹−1=a3+d? How can you rearrange that equation such that we have
a3=(something)? Using this result, what can you say about
a2? And then what can you say about
a1? Finally, what do you get when you plug these values into the first given equation that
a1+a2=13? Where does that lead you?