Artstor Digital Library Collections from the world’s … Smith, Assistant Librarian, Modern &...

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Artstor Digital Library Collections from the world’s leading museums and archives A PEERLESS IMAGE RESOURCE. A POWERFUL SET OF TOOLS.

Transcript of Artstor Digital Library Collections from the world’s … Smith, Assistant Librarian, Modern &...

Artstor Digital LibraryCollections from the world’s leading museums and archives

A P E E R L E S S I M A G E R E S O U R C E .

A P O W E R F U L S E T O F T O O L S .

�e Artstor Digital Library o�ers more than 2 million images from the world’s leading museums, photo archives, scholars, and artists in one easily-navigated repository. It is the most comprehensive image resource available for educational and scholarly use across disciplines, with many rare and important collections that can be seen nowhere else.

Hundreds of thousands of images are added every year, continually expanding our areas of reference and study. All images are accompanied by comprehensive metadata and are rights-cleared for educational use.

Other features:

• Subject-specific image groups selected for dozens of disciplines, ready for downloading

• Instant custom PowerPoint presentations with images and full caption information• Robust and expanding Teaching Resources—including Curriculum Guides, Subject

Guides, AP® Curriculum support, and more—created by faculty for faculty• Useful and inspiring case studies for teaching with the Artstor Digital Library • Tools for viewing fine detail and comparing two images at once• Discoverable through the Primo Central Index, EBSCO Discovery Service™,

Paratext’s 19th Century Masterfile, and Serials Solutions’ Summon™ service• Integrates with your institution’s LMS

Why is the Artstor Digital Library the preeminent visual resource for academic libraries and museums?

Advanced Placement® and AP® are trademarks registered and/or owned by the College Board, which was not involved in the production of, and does not endorse, this resource.

“I think it’s really valuable to have such a wealth of images available across our whole

institution. It’s very inter-faculty, interdisciplinary, and the high quality of the

images is very useful to students and researchers.”

Charlotte Smith, Assistant Librarian, Modern & Medieval Languages, Cambridge University

Which academic departments will benefit from the Artstor Digital Library?Artstor's unparalleled range of images support teaching and research in nearly every topic imaginable, including Anthropology, Archaeology, Architecture, Art History, Cultural Studies, Fashion & Costume, Literature, Religion, Theater, and World History, to name just a few. Scores of images in a far-reaching variety of subjects include:

Historical and cutting-edge art from museums such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Guggenheim Foundation, MoMA, the National Gallery in London, the New Museum of Contemporary Art, and the Louvre

Cartoons from The New Yorker

80,000 photographs showing major world events and personalities from Magnum Photos

Interactive 360-degree panoramas of world architecture and monuments from Columbia University

Fashion and celebrity photographs from Condé Nast

Pre-Columbian sites and artifacts from the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology

Ceremonial artifacts of the Yao people of Vietnam from Ohio University

“One of the things I like about Artstor that I found really helpful is that the

images that are there are beyond what you �nd in a textbook, because it will link history, science, social sciences,

photography, various disciplines into one database.”

Gloria Mast, Adjunct Instructor, HACC and Pennsylvania College of Art & Design

American and European dresses, clothes, and accessories from the Brooklyn Museum

Colonial, modern, and contemporary Latin American art from Colección Patricia Phelps de Cisneros

Seminal performance art videos from the Franklin Furnace Archives

Botanical and zoological illustrations from the Cook’s Voyages to the South Seas collection

Images of Ghiberti’s restored Renaissance masterpiece the “Gates of Paradise”

High-quality digital reconstructions of Buddhist cave shrines in Dunhuang, China

What tools are available with the Artstor Digital Library?

S E A R C H

Search by keyword, date range, geography, classification, and/or

collection; filter results by one of 16 classifications; or browse

by category.

V I E W & O R G A N I Z E

Enlarge, pan, and rotate. Create image groups,

write group descriptions, build presentations, generate

citations, and more.

S H A R E

Share images or groups of images with others at your

institution; create folders and image groups that

can be accessed and/or edited by students.

P R I N T

Print images, details, descriptive data, and citations.

D O W N L O A D

Download images and image details individually, in zipped

groups of up to 150 at a time, or as PowerPoint presentations.

M O B I L E

Search, browse, and view image groups on smartphones

and tablets. Study with our flashcard feature.

Artstor also offers Shared Shelf, an affordable digital media-management system that enables you to preserve your institution’s digital assets and set them free to be seen, downloaded, and used with Artstor's powerful tools.

Shared Shelf supports almost any imaginable digital media project, allowing users to maximize the value of their media—from cataloging special collections, documenting the images from a science project, or preserving faculty work and sharing these collections on campus, with other institutions, or on the Web.

Do you have your own collections? Set them free with Shared Shelf.

CatalogCreate rich data records efficiently with bulk editing tools, work record support, and integrated Getty vocabularies. You can import and export your metadata in Excel, customize cataloging screens to support novice and expert users, and edit our metadata templates or create your own.

ManageBuild your digital collections of video, audio, documents, and images—with 25 different file types supported. Multiple users with different permission levels can work simultaneously from remote locations. All content is preserved following the National Digital Stewardship Alliance's suggested guidelines.

ShareCreate digital exhibitions or publish collections into a discovery workspace that provides a single point of access to your content and the Artstor Digital Library; set viewing and download size of published images; use Open API to publish to an institutional repository or OAI harvesting to publish to a discovery platform.

“Artstor ful�lls a major portion of our users’ needs for digital images. It gives access to its ever-growing collection,

and provides tools to help users organize and present. In addition, we host our image collections in the Digital Library

using Shared Shelf. �is allows us to save precious time and gives our users the ability to search both University

of Ottawa and Artstor collections simultaneously.”

�e Artstor Digital Library o�ers more than 2 million images from the world’s leading museums, photo archives, scholars, and artists in one easily-navigated repository. It is the most comprehensive image resource available for educational and scholarly use across disciplines, with many rare and important collections that can be seen nowhere else.

Hundreds of thousands of images are added every year, continually expanding our areas of reference and study. All images are accompanied by comprehensive metadata and are rights-cleared for educational use.

Other features:

• Subject-specific image groups selected for dozens of disciplines, ready for downloading

• Instant custom PowerPoint presentations with images and full caption information• Robust and expanding Teaching Resources—including Curriculum Guides, Subject

Guides, AP® Curriculum support, and more—created by faculty for faculty• Useful and inspiring case studies for teaching with the Artstor Digital Library • Tools for viewing fine detail and comparing two images at once• Discoverable through the Primo Central Index, EBSCO Discovery Service™,

Paratext’s 19th Century Masterfile, and Serials Solutions’ Summon™ service• Integrates with your institution’s LMS

Why is the Artstor Digital Library the preeminent visual resource for academic libraries and museums?

Advanced Placement® and AP® are trademarks registered and/or owned by the College Board, which was not involved in the production of, and does not endorse, this resource.

“I think it’s really valuable to have such a wealth of images available across our whole

institution. It’s very inter-faculty, interdisciplinary, and the high quality of the

images is very useful to students and researchers.”

Charlotte Smith, Assistant Librarian, Modern & Medieval Languages, Cambridge University

Which academic departments will benefit from the Artstor Digital Library?Artstor's unparalleled range of images support teaching and research in nearly every topic imaginable, including Anthropology, Archaeology, Architecture, Art History, Cultural Studies, Fashion & Costume, Literature, Religion, Theater, and World History, to name just a few. Scores of images in a far-reaching variety of subjects include:

Historical and cutting-edge art from museums such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Guggenheim Foundation, MoMA, the National Gallery in London, the New Museum of Contemporary Art, and the Louvre

Cartoons from The New Yorker

80,000 photographs showing major world events and personalities from Magnum Photos

Interactive 360-degree panoramas of world architecture and monuments from Columbia University

Fashion and celebrity photographs from Condé Nast

Pre-Columbian sites and artifacts from the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology

Ceremonial artifacts of the Yao people of Vietnam from Ohio University

“One of the things I like about Artstor that I found really helpful is that the

images that are there are beyond what you �nd in a textbook, because it will link history, science, social sciences,

photography, various disciplines into one database.”

Gloria Mast, Adjunct Instructor, HACC and Pennsylvania College of Art & Design

American and European dresses, clothes, and accessories from the Brooklyn Museum

Colonial, modern, and contemporary Latin American art from Colección Patricia Phelps de Cisneros

Seminal performance art videos from the Franklin Furnace Archives

Botanical and zoological illustrations from the Cook’s Voyages to the South Seas collection

Images of Ghiberti’s restored Renaissance masterpiece the “Gates of Paradise”

High-quality digital reconstructions of Buddhist cave shrines in Dunhuang, China

What tools are available with the Artstor Digital Library?

S E A R C H

Search by keyword, date range, geography, classification, and/or

collection; filter results by one of 16 classifications; or browse

by category.

V I E W & O R G A N I Z E

Enlarge, pan, and rotate. Create image groups,

write group descriptions, build presentations, generate

citations, and more.

S H A R E

Share images or groups of images with others at your

institution; create folders and image groups that

can be accessed and/or edited by students.

P R I N T

Print images, details, descriptive data, and citations.

D O W N L O A D

Download images and image details individually, in zipped

groups of up to 150 at a time, or as PowerPoint presentations.

M O B I L E

Search, browse, and view image groups on smartphones

and tablets. Study with our flashcard feature.

Artstor also offers Shared Shelf, an affordable digital media-management system that enables you to preserve your institution’s digital assets and set them free to be seen, downloaded, and used with Artstor's powerful tools.

Shared Shelf supports almost any imaginable digital media project, allowing users to maximize the value of their media—from cataloging special collections, documenting the images from a science project, or preserving faculty work and sharing these collections on campus, with other institutions, or on the Web.

Do you have your own collections? Set them free with Shared Shelf.

CatalogCreate rich data records efficiently with bulk editing tools, work record support, and integrated Getty vocabularies. You can import and export your metadata in Excel, customize cataloging screens to support novice and expert users, and edit our metadata templates or create your own.

ManageBuild your digital collections of video, audio, documents, and images—with 25 different file types supported. Multiple users with different permission levels can work simultaneously from remote locations. All content is preserved following the National Digital Stewardship Alliance's suggested guidelines.

ShareCreate digital exhibitions or publish collections into a discovery workspace that provides a single point of access to your content and the Artstor Digital Library; set viewing and download size of published images; use Open API to publish to an institutional repository or OAI harvesting to publish to a discovery platform.

“Artstor ful�lls a major portion of our users’ needs for digital images. It gives access to its ever-growing collection,

and provides tools to help users organize and present. In addition, we host our image collections in the Digital Library

using Shared Shelf. �is allows us to save precious time and gives our users the ability to search both University

of Ottawa and Artstor collections simultaneously.”

�e Artstor Digital Library o�ers more than 2 million images from the world’s leading museums, photo archives, scholars, and artists in one easily-navigated repository. It is the most comprehensive image resource available for educational and scholarly use across disciplines, with many rare and important collections that can be seen nowhere else.

Hundreds of thousands of images are added every year, continually expanding our areas of reference and study. All images are accompanied by comprehensive metadata and are rights-cleared for educational use.

Other features:

• Subject-specific image groups selected for dozens of disciplines, ready for downloading

• Instant custom PowerPoint presentations with images and full caption information• Robust and expanding Teaching Resources—including Curriculum Guides, Subject

Guides, AP® Curriculum support, and more—created by faculty for faculty• Useful and inspiring case studies for teaching with the Artstor Digital Library • Tools for viewing fine detail and comparing two images at once• Discoverable through the Primo Central Index, EBSCO Discovery Service™,

Paratext’s 19th Century Masterfile, and Serials Solutions’ Summon™ service• Integrates with your institution’s LMS

Why is the Artstor Digital Library the preeminent visual resource for academic libraries and museums?

Advanced Placement® and AP® are trademarks registered and/or owned by the College Board, which was not involved in the production of, and does not endorse, this resource.

“I think it’s really valuable to have such a wealth of images available across our whole

institution. It’s very inter-faculty, interdisciplinary, and the high quality of the

images is very useful to students and researchers.”

Charlotte Smith, Assistant Librarian, Modern & Medieval Languages, Cambridge University

Which academic departments will benefit from the Artstor Digital Library?Artstor's unparalleled range of images support teaching and research in nearly every topic imaginable, including Anthropology, Archaeology, Architecture, Art History, Cultural Studies, Fashion & Costume, Literature, Religion, Theater, and World History, to name just a few. Scores of images in a far-reaching variety of subjects include:

Historical and cutting-edge art from museums such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Guggenheim Foundation, MoMA, the National Gallery in London, the New Museum of Contemporary Art, and the Louvre

Cartoons from The New Yorker

80,000 photographs showing major world events and personalities from Magnum Photos

Interactive 360-degree panoramas of world architecture and monuments from Columbia University

Fashion and celebrity photographs from Condé Nast

Pre-Columbian sites and artifacts from the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology

Ceremonial artifacts of the Yao people of Vietnam from Ohio University

“One of the things I like about Artstor that I found really helpful is that the

images that are there are beyond what you �nd in a textbook, because it will link history, science, social sciences,

photography, various disciplines into one database.”

Gloria Mast, Adjunct Instructor, HACC and Pennsylvania College of Art & Design

American and European dresses, clothes, and accessories from the Brooklyn Museum

Colonial, modern, and contemporary Latin American art from Colección Patricia Phelps de Cisneros

Seminal performance art videos from the Franklin Furnace Archives

Botanical and zoological illustrations from the Cook’s Voyages to the South Seas collection

Images of Ghiberti’s restored Renaissance masterpiece the “Gates of Paradise”

High-quality digital reconstructions of Buddhist cave shrines in Dunhuang, China

What tools are available with the Artstor Digital Library?

S E A R C H

Search by keyword, date range, geography, classification, and/or

collection; filter results by one of 16 classifications; or browse

by category.

V I E W & O R G A N I Z E

Enlarge, pan, and rotate. Create image groups,

write group descriptions, build presentations, generate

citations, and more.

S H A R E

Share images or groups of images with others at your

institution; create folders and image groups that

can be accessed and/or edited by students.

P R I N T

Print images, details, descriptive data, and citations.

D O W N L O A D

Download images and image details individually, in zipped

groups of up to 150 at a time, or as PowerPoint presentations.

M O B I L E

Search, browse, and view image groups on smartphones

and tablets. Study with our flashcard feature.

Artstor also offers Shared Shelf, an affordable digital media-management system that enables you to preserve your institution’s digital assets and set them free to be seen, downloaded, and used with Artstor's powerful tools.

Shared Shelf supports almost any imaginable digital media project, allowing users to maximize the value of their media—from cataloging special collections, documenting the images from a science project, or preserving faculty work and sharing these collections on campus, with other institutions, or on the Web.

Do you have your own collections? Set them free with Shared Shelf.

CatalogCreate rich data records efficiently with bulk editing tools, work record support, and integrated Getty vocabularies. You can import and export your metadata in Excel, customize cataloging screens to support novice and expert users, and edit our metadata templates or create your own.

ManageBuild your digital collections of video, audio, documents, and images—with 25 different file types supported. Multiple users with different permission levels can work simultaneously from remote locations. All content is preserved following the National Digital Stewardship Alliance's suggested guidelines.

ShareCreate digital exhibitions or publish collections into a discovery workspace that provides a single point of access to your content and the Artstor Digital Library; set viewing and download size of published images; use Open API to publish to an institutional repository or OAI harvesting to publish to a discovery platform.

“Artstor ful�lls a major portion of our users’ needs for digital images. It gives access to its ever-growing collection,

and provides tools to help users organize and present. In addition, we host our image collections in the Digital Library

using Shared Shelf. �is allows us to save precious time and gives our users the ability to search both University

of Ottawa and Artstor collections simultaneously.”

Sign up for a free 30-day trial and find out firsthand why nearly 2,000 institutions around the world subscribe. Contact us at +1 212-500-2441 or [email protected] to get started.

Try Artstor for free right now.

Artstor is part of ITHAKA, a not-for-profit organization helping the academic community use digital technologies to preserve the scholarly record and to advance research and teaching in sustainable ways.

Marion Post Wolcott, Eroded farmland; Wadesboro North Carolina, 1938. The Portland Art Museum / Jacob Lawrence, Toussaint L'Ouverture series; no. 32, 1938. © 2014 The Jacob and Gwendolyn Lawrence Foundation, Seattle / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York, Amistad Research Center / SBA International and Knippers Helbig Advanced Engineering Stuttgart / New York., Axis, Shanghai EXPO 2010; view through the AXIS canopies of the China Pavilion, 2010, Shanghai, China. Image and original data provided by Art on File, artonfile.com / Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres, Napoleon on His Imperial Throne, 1806, Musée des beaux-arts de Rennes. Image and original data provided by Erich Lessing Culture and Fine Arts Archives/ART RESOURCE, N.Y.; artres.com / John Redfern (costume designer); Ludwik Strimpl (illustrator), "Le Frisson Nouveau - Robe de tango de Redfern", 1914. Image and catalog data provided by Allan T. Kohl, Minneapolis College of Art and Design / Abbie Trayler-Smith, A Tuareg herdsman fights his way through sandstorms at Lake Banzena. It has not rained for months and the area is suffering from the most severe drought to hit Mali in 29 years, 2009. © Abbie Trayler-Smith / Panos Pictures; panos.co.uk / Katsushika Hokusai, Ejiri in Suruga Province; from the series Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji, 1830/1831, color woodblock print. Portland Art Museum / Unknown Hupa artist, Basket, ca. 1940. Portland Art Museum / Ricardo Legorreta, UCSF Mission Bay Community Center; out door courtyard on fourth floor, 2005, UCSF, San Francisco. Image and original data provided by Art on File, artonfile.com / Chinese for the Tibetan market, Saddle, 17th to 18th century. Image © The Metropolitan Museum of Art. / Édouard Manet, Portrait of Émilie Ambre as Carmen, c. 1879. Image and data from the Philadelphia Museum of Art / Ludwik Strimpl, "L'Encens, le cinname et la myrrhe - Robes du soir", 1913. Image and catalog data provided by Allan T. Kohl, Minneapolis College of Art and Design / Roman, Colosseum, Rome, Italy, 70-82 AD Art History Survey Collection / Marc Chagall, The Flying Cow, 1912. Image and data from the Williams College Museum of Art. © 2009 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris / Joseph Peller, Night Owls. © Joseph Peller / Le Corbusier, Villa Savoye, 1929-1930, Poissy-sur-Seine, France. Catalogued by: Digital Library Federation Academic Image Cooperative © 2009 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris / FLC