Skip to Main Content

Art

Searching the Library's collections

When searching for information about an artist, individual work of art, or a topic, enter words about the artist's name, any title words that you know, or the topic. Since the search results will refer you both to books in the Library and articles to which we have online access, you may find it useful to limit the results. Look to the left side of the screen for "Tweak your results" (or the funnel icon on mobile devices), choose "Resource Type" then "Articles" or "Books". 

Try it in search box below:

Searching for journal articles

The Library Search above provides access to many journal articles on art topics.  But for a thorough search of journal articles in art, it is best to search for articles in a journal index that concentrates on art. The primary index for art jounals is "Art & Architecture Source"  Articles on religious aspects of art can be found in "ATLA Religion Database."

 

Search tips

(Adapted from Thomas Mann, Library Research Models)

  1. Keyword searches. Search relevant keywords in catalogs, indexes, search engines, and full-text resources. Useful both to narrow a search to the specific subject heading and to find sources not captured under a relevant subject heading. To search a database effectively, start with a Keyword search, find relevant records, and then find relevant Subject Headings. In search engines, include many keywords to narrow the search and carefully evaluate what you find.

  2. Subject searches.  Subject Headings (sometimes called Descriptors) are specific terms or phrases used consistently by online or print indexes to describe what a book or journal article is about. This is true of the library’s Catalog as well as other library databases

  3. Look for recent scholarly books and articles. Within catalogs and databases, sort by the most recent date and look for books from scholarly presses and articles from scholarly journals. The more recent the source, the more up-to-date the references and citations.

  4. Citation searches in scholarly sources.  Track down references, footnotes, endnotes, citations, etc. within relevant readings. Search for specific books or journals in the library’s Catalog. This technique helps you become part of the scholarly conversation on a particular topic.

  5. Searches through published bibliographies (including sets of footnotes in relevant subject documents).  Published bibliographies on particular subjects (Shakespeare, alcoholism, etc.) often list sources missed through other kinds of searches. BIBLIOGRAPHY is a subject heading in the Catalog, so a Guided Search with BIBLIOGRAPHY as a Subject and your topic as a keyword will help you find these.

  6. Searches through people sources (whether by verbal contact, e-mail, etc.). People are often more willing to help than you might think. The people to start with are often professors with relevant knowledge or librarians.

  7. Systematic browsing, especially of full-text sources arranged in predictable subject groupings. Libraries organize books by subject, with similar books shelved together.  Browsing the stacks is a good way to find similar books. Most anthropology books are classified as GF and GN by the Library of Congress.