Works of art and images of works of art are copyrighted: that means United States Copyright Law (a federal law) grants the creator of an original work the exclusive right to reproduce and distribute their work. However, the rights are limited in duration and subject to some exceptions, or limitations, which permit people the use of a copyrighted work without the copyright holder's (the creator's) permission, under certain conditions.
Copyright and Ethics of Image Use by Karen Bouchard
One often permitted use of copyrighted material is for purposes of "fair use".
The policy of "Fair Use" allows scholars, students, teachers, and others to use works that are still in copyright protection for the purpose of education and criticism. This does not mean that any use is fair as long as it is for educational purposes, but education is specifically mentioned as a favored purpose. For more info, here is a link to the MIT Libraries' guide for images and fair use:
Using Images: Copyright and Fair Use by Ellen Duranceau
WORKS CITED FOR A WORK OF VISUAL ART: PRINT OR ONLINE REPRODUCTIONS
Artist LastName, FirstName. Title of Work. Date of Composition. Medium of Composition. Institution Housing Work, City Where Institution Is Located.
EXAMPLES:
Monet, Claude. Water Lily Pond. 1900. Art Insitute of Chicago, Chicago. Artic.edu. Web. 4 August 2014.
Kandinsky, Vasily. Orange. 1923. Museum of Modern Art, New York. WikiArt.org. Web. 25 July 2013.
da Vinci, Leonardo. Mona Lisa. 1503-1506. Oil on wood. Louvre, Paris.
WORKS CITED FOR A WORK OF VISUAL ART: ONLY CITED ONLINE
Artist LastName, FirstName. "Title of Work." Date Created. Editor/Author/Compiler Name. Name of Website. Name of Website Publisher. Medium of Publication. Date of Access.
EXAMPLES:
Javacolleen. "Lantern Floating." 2010. Flickr. Web. 2 December 2012.
Elson, John. "4Palmount." 2009. Wikimedia.org. Wikimedia Commons. Web. 4 August 2014.
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
Section 5.7.6 of the seventh edition of the MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers.
The sixth edition of the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association does not have guidelines for images, artwork, sculpture, photographs, etc. However, here are some guidelines from the APA Style Blog:
SOCIAL MEDIA PHOTO, GRAPHIC, OR PHOTO ALBUM
Creator, A. (Date Posted). Caption text [Medium]. Retrieved from http://website.url
EXAMPLES
Includes examples of the original graphics, reference entries, and in-text citations.
VISUAL ART PIECE
Artist, A. (Year Created). Title of work [Medium]. Location of work: Institution housing work.
EXAMPLES
Includes citation examples for several different art pieces, including work viewed online.
G.R. Little Library
Elizabeth City State University