The Artstor Digital Library is a resource containing over 2 million images from the world's museums, archives, libraries, scholars, and artists. Use Artstor to find images for papers, presentations, and study in the humanities. You must register for an account to use many of Artstor’s features, such as downloading images, curating groups of images, and downloading groups of images to PowerPoint.
Downloading the Offline Image Viewer(OIV) is necessary to create presentations.
Saving images •Double click on image (this will allow you to download) •Save the image to your desktop – DO NOT CHANGE THE NAME OF THE FILE •Open your desktop •There will be two files with the same name on your desktop. •One of them is the jpeg; this is the one you need to work with. •Right click on the name field and rename the image. •Open it up and save it to your desktop or H: drive. •You can now import the picture in Powerpoint or some other program.
The Classical Art Research Centre at Oxford University leads and supports research on ancient art. At its heart is the Beazley Archive, which includes the world's largest collection of images of ancient figure-decorated pottery.
"Our primary goal is to make world’s art accessible to anyone and anywhere. WikiArt already features some 250.000 artworks by 3.000 artists, localized on 8 languages. These artworks are in museums, universities, town halls, and other civic buildings of more than 100 countries. Most of this art is not on public view. With your active involvement, we are planning to cover the entire art history of the Earth, from cave artworks to modern private collections. We also provide you with tools for translation on as many languages as needed." --WikiArt