<p>I thought it was pretty easy. The works I used for the essays were Theodora and Attendants in the apse mosaic of San Vitale, Queen Hatshepsut and Offering jars at her mastaba tomb, Maya Lin's Vietnam war memorial, and Gehry's Stata Center at MIT.</p>
<p>I omitted 6 MC's, and I know I got at least 4 MCs wrong. I was lost on the slide based MC's.
I had to guess on the rest. I'm pretty sure I aced both long essays, and probably:
4/4, 4/4, 4/4, 3/4, 2/4, 4/4, 4/4 or so. I'm worried the MC will kill me though.</p>
<p>I don't believe we are allowed to discuss what we used. </p>
<p>i probably used the exact same thing as you 2468, unfortunately however i found out from my teacher that it isnt the best thing to use because some of it actually stimulated the european tradition</p>
<p>I used probably the same thing as both of you, but I wish that I knew that the America's does not count as something "beyond the european tradition" because I then would have a huge list to choose from! Regardless of that potential screw up, everything else was nice to me.</p>
<p>The problem with using a prehistoric piece of art is that not a huge amount is known, and is mostly speculation. I'm assuming you used the Venus of Waldorf. I used a rather interesting example too, but I'll post it after the time is up. Also, while it is technically not European, I'm not sure if ETS views it as such. Prehistoric art is listed separately on the exam percentages from non-european art. </p>
<p>And I'm not quite sure about the ratio in my class (online), but there were only 3 of us in the exam room and I was the only male.</p>