Andare, Partire, Tornare ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- And the winner is...me, hopefully Well, it's in the lap of the gods now. This test went much better than the last one, in that I was writing sentences without having to fight for each word. It just felt like it flowed out of me, not like I was struggling to think. It's not over until it's over, though. Here are the slides I saw today, minus one that I can't remember. Overall, I feel like I did pretty well, but there are a few where it depends on how the professor feels like grading. Everybody - thanks so much for the support. I don't think you all realize how much it means to me. Although, Caerula...that was one scary purple poodle :-) Warhol: Marilyn Diptych Hagia Sophia Van Dyke:Charles I Hunting Reims sculpture (totally botched this one - didn't recognize it) Seurat: Bathers Limbourg Bros.: January, from the Tres Riche Heurs de Duc de Berry Peplos Kore Titian: Sacred and Profane Love Poussin:Burial of the Ashes Hatshepsut's Funerary Temple at Der-El-Bahri Michelangelo:Giulanio Medici's tomb Marcel Duchamp:Fountain Bernini: San Andrea at Quirinale Goya: 3rd of May, 1808 Jan Steen:Feast of St. Nicholas Markson Hartley:Portrait of a German Officer (Botched this one too) Donatello:Judith and Holofernes Good Shepherd Mosaic from Galla Placidia's Mausoleum Frank Lloyd Wright: Fallingwater Ara Pacis - the Tellus plaque Abbot Suger:St. Denis Ambulatory Murillo:Immaculate Conception (probably botched, a very unfair slide) Oppenheim:Fur Cup, saucer, and spoon Alberti:Malatestiano/San Francesco at Rimini Fragonard: The Meeting St Mark from the Ebbo Gospels Cole: The Oxbow Arc d'Triumph Jan Van Eyck: Man in a Red Turban 1:23 p.m. - 2002-03-16 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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