

Page or Plate Number.Įxample: Kahlo, Frida. Place of publication: Publisher, Year of publication. Copyright 2006 by Art Resource.Īrtist's first name, last name. Mamiya (Ed.). 2001, Belmont: Thomson Wadsworth. Reprinted from Gardner’s Art Through the Ages: The Western Perspective Twelfth Edition (p 774). Copyright by Copyright Holder.Įxample: Kahlo, Frida (Artist). Surname, Year, Place of Publication: Publisher. Reprinted from, Book Title (page number), by Author First Initial. Country of origin or city, and state, and repository. Print.Īrtist's last name, first name, artist’s role (in parentheses i.e. 1939. Museo de Art Moderno, Mexico City. Gardner’s Art Through the Ages: The Western Perspective. 12th ed.

Medium of reproduction.Įxample: Kahlo, Frida. Name of institution/private collection housing artwork. If you scan an image from a book or magazine in order to include it in your paper, you still must cite the print resource you used to gain access to the artwork.Īrtist’s last name, first name. 143.5 cm × 136.5 cm. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.Ĭiting the reproduction of a work of art in print simply means that you had access to work of art through a print resource, such as a book, magazine, or brochure. Repository.Įxample: Rembrandt Harmensz van Rijn. Aristotle with a Bust of Homer. 1653. (1653). Aristotle with a Bust of Homer . New York, New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art.Īrtist's first name, last name. Country of origin or city, and state: and repository.Įxample: Rembrandt Harmensz van Rijn (Artist). Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.Īrtist's last name, first name, artist’s role (in parentheses i.e. Name of institution/collection housing artwork, city where institution/private collection is located.Įxample: Rembrandt Harmensz van Rijn. The person, or institutions responsible for creating Reproductions, such as photographs or digital scans of artworks, have ownership of copyright over the reproduction and must be given credit in your citation.Ĭiting an original work of art in your research means that you had access to the material work in order to study it-rather than using a book, or website.Īrtist’s last name, first name. Similarly, if you went to a museum sculpture garden to study an artwork, you could include a photograph you took of the work in a research paper cited as Original Work of Art-but not if you used a photograph provided by the museum. The citation of an original work of art differs from the citation of a reproduction (photograph or scan) from a secondary source, such as a book or a website. If you visited the California State Library in Sacramento to view a historical photograph, then you had access to an Original Work of Visual Art, but not if you gained access to that photograph online.
