
Art History 2
- Home
- Finding Images
- Romanticism & Race (1780-1880)
- Orientalism & Women
- Realism & the Avant-Garde
- Impressionism & Japonism
- Post-Impressionism & Neo Impressionism (c.1863-1900)
- Symbolism and Art Nouveau (c.1880-1910)
- Fauvism and Cubism (c.1900-1920)
- Spiritualism, Expressionism, Die Brücke and Der Blaue Reiter (c.1890-1939)
- Futurism, Orphism, Suprematism, De Stijl & Constructivism(c.1909-1940s)
- Dada (1916-1923) and Surrealism (c.1922-1960s)
- The Harlem Renaissance (c.1920s – 1930s)
- “Los Tres Grandes” - “The Three Great Ones” - Mexican Modernism (c.1920-1950)
- Abstract Expressionism – Action Painting & Color-Field Painting (c.1943-1965)
- Pop Art
- Appendix: List of All Ebooks in Guide
Artstor
- Artstor on JSTOR This link opens in a new window
**Artstor has moved to the JSTOR platform as of August 1, 2024** Documents artistic traditions across many time periods and cultures including architecture, painting, sculpture, photography, decorative arts, and design. Digital images come from museums, archaeological teams, photo archives, slide collections, and art reference publishers. The collection is over 2+ million images. Users must create a personal account.
The Artstor platform will be discontinued in August 2024 and all content will be available in JSTOR.
- ARTstor - Getting StartedHelpful links, tutorials and information on how to navigate ARTstor.
Other Hi-Res and Ultra Hi-Res Image Sites
- Museum of Modern Art, CollectionsOur evolving collection contains almost 200,000 works of modern and contemporary art. More than 90,000 works are currently available online.
- Metropolitan Museum of Art, Collections406,000 images of public-domain artworks from The Met collection available for free and unrestricted use.Frequently Asked Questions: Image and Data Resources: https://www.metmuseum.org/about-the-met/policies-and-documents/image-resources/frequently-asked-questions
- HaltadeninizioneCollection of images in gigapixel format including many Renaissance pieces.
- Art Institure of ChicagoExplore thousands of artworks in the museum’s wide-ranging collection—from our world-renowned icons to lesser-known gems from every corner of the globe—as well as our books, writings, reference materials, and other resources.
- Google Cultural InstituteArticle about the Google Art Camera: https://lynceans.org/all-posts/stunning-ultra-high-resolution-images-from-the-google-art-camera/
- Viewing Vermeer on the WWWDigital images of artworks, which have all but replaced traditional color slides, are essential for scholarly study and teaching, but they are likewise economically valuable. Many museums offer only thumbnail images, watermark their images, prohibit downloading, or simply keep their collections offline. A few pioneering institutions have adopted an open access policy offering free of charge and free of copyright high-quality digital images of their works of art.
- Closer to Van EyckAn in-depth site about the recent restoration of The Ghent Alterpiece. Includes the following:
A 100-billion-pixel image of The Ghent Altarpiece that allows viewers to zoom in extremely close and see details including individual brushstrokes and tiny cracks in the paint.
Before/during/after images of the restoration in macrophotography, Infrared macrophotography, Infrared reflectography, and X-radiography
Also includes similar images of many other Van Eyck paintings in macrophotography, Infrared macrophotography, Infrared reflectography, and X-radiography
An article about the restoration and the Closer to Van Eyck website:
https://blogs.getty.edu/iris/the-ghent-altarpiece-in-100-billion-pixels/ - A 44.8 Gigapixel image of Rembrandt’s The Night WatchAn article by Will Compertz about this image: https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-52657164
ONLINE DIGITAL IMAGE RESOURCES
COPYRIGHT & FAIR USE
Below are a few research guides on Copyright Basics:
The following are some great Use Assessment Tools pertaining to copyright, fair use guidelines and best practices:
- Digital Image Rights Computator (DIRC)Program that assists users in assessing the intellectual property status of a specific image.
- The Copyright GenieHelps users figure out if a work is covered by U.S. copyright and at what level; additionally, it collects and publishes the results as a PDF document for users to save for their records.
- Digital Copyright SliderA tool to help users determine whether a work is still copyrighted or whether it is now in public domain.
- Fair Use EvaluatorGives users a better understanding of how to determine if the use of a protected work is "fair." It also helps users organize and documents their collected information that may be needed to support a fair use claim, providing a time-stamped PDF document for the user's records.
Click here to visit Colgate University's helpful examples of how to create correct image citations in papers and presentations, using MLA, Chicago and APA writing styles. Another great option is the Research Guide for Citing Images provided by UC Libraries.
Reclaiming Fair Use by Patricia Aufderheide; Peter Jaszi
Call Number: KF3020 .A984 2011ISBN: 9780226032276Publication Date: 2011-08-15Copyright and cultural Institutions by Peter B. Hirtle; Emily Hudson; Andrew T. Kenyon
Call Number: KF2996 .H57 2009ISBN: 9780935995107Publication Date: 2009-01-01The Law of Libraries and Archives by Bryan M. Carson
Call Number: KF4315 .C37 2007ISBN: 9780810851894Publication Date: 2006-12-07
- Last Updated: Jan 19, 2024 10:19 AM
- URL: https://sva.libguides.com/arthistory2
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