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ARTstor

Students can use ARTstor, our new database of digital images, in various ways. You can review the images after a class, study for an exam (either on-line or with print-outs), research images in any or all of the ARTstor collections, and create your own student folders of images. Here are the directions:

BASIC ARTSTOR INSTRUCTIONS:

1) To register and logon: Go to www.artstor.org. Register by clicking on the LAUNCH button at the right. When the next page appears, click on 'Register' at the right and follow the simple instructions. Use your Millsaps e-mail address and password. Note: You only need to register once, but you have to logon each time you use ARTstor by following the above steps but clicking on 'Logon' rather than 'Register'.

2) To see the images for our class: Go to the area entitled 'View Image Groups' (near the top right), select the appropriate course folder (usually the teacher's last name and course title) and then select the image group and hit 'Submit'.

You can enlarge an image by double-clicking on it (if your computer has pop-ups blocked, then you'll have to unblock them to do this - see the ARTstor 'Help' for instructions). Once the image is enlarged you can zoom in by clicking on it.

Note that most of the Image Groups will have more than one page. Use the arrows at the top left to navigate to the next page.

3) To do research and/or create your own personal image groups: Go to 'Home' and do a keyword search or browse through the collections. ARTstor is still working on the data that go along with the images so you sometimes have to be inventive and persistent in your searches if you're looking for something particular. For general themes that interest you, try various possible keywords. See the ARTstor 'Help' for searching tips.

When you find an image you want in your image group, click once on the image to highlight it (the frame will turn bright yellow). You can highlight as many images as you want. Then go to 'Image Groups' on the top toolbar, and 'Save selected images into new group'. You'll be prompted to select your Image Group Folder and you should choose the default setting of 'My Work Folder'. Then type in the name you want to give this image group, check 'Create New Group', and hit 'Save' (or 'Save and Open' if you want it to open right away). You can keep adding images to that group, and also you can create as many image groups as you'd like in your personal 'My Work Folder'. This folder is viewable only by you.

4) To print out study images: To study for an exam you can either look at the image groups for our course on your computer screen (the advantage to this is that you can enlarge each image and can also zoom into it) or you can print them out.

a) To print a complete Image Group from our class: First open it by going to 'View Image Groups', selecting the folder and then the Image Group. When you see the thumbnail images on the screen, go to 'View' on the toolbar and select 'Image group print preview'. You'll be given several options, to print all of the data associated with the image or only the creator and title (and any instructor's comments or personal notes, if there are any). When the window appears with the thumbnail images ready to be printed, click the Print icon at the top. Each page will have 4 images. You can print in color or B&W (to print B&W go to File - Print - Properties - Grayscale Printing).

Note that some Image Groups have many slides, so it would take a lot of paper and ink to print out the whole group. In these cases you might want to do the following:

b) To print selected images from our class: Go to the Image Group and highlight each image that you want by clicking on it once to turn the frame bright yellow. After you've highlighted all the images in that group that you want to print, right click with the mouse and select 'Save selected images into new group'. A prompt will come up and you should select 'My Work Folder' (scroll up to the top to find it) and then type in a title for this new image group (something like test1). Then go to any other Image Groups for this unit and follow the same procedure. If an Image Group has more than one page, you can continue highlighting page by page whichever images you want, and do the 'Save selected images into new group' process after you've looked at the whole group.

c) To print individual images: You can also download individual images from ARTstor by double-clicking on the thumbnail image in the Image Group to enlarge the image, then clicking on the Print icon at the lower right. You can also download an image by clicking on the Download Image icon and following the simple instructions. The image will download as a low resolution jpeg file.

5) To send a link to your Image Group: Each Image Group has its own unique URL, including those in 'My Work Folder'. If you want to share the images you've collected in your work folder with your teacher or anyone else, open the image group, click on 'Image Groups' at the top and scroll down to 'Display Image Group URL'. The URL will appear in a box and you can highlight and copy it (Control C), then paste it (Control V) into an e-mail.

CLASS PRESENTATIONS WITH DIGITAL IMAGES

I. Search in ARTstor for images:

To register and logon: Go to www.artstor.org. Register by clicking on the LAUNCH button at the right. When the next page appears, click on 'Register' at the right and follow the simple instructions. Use your Millsaps e-mail address and password. You only need to register once, but you have to logon each time you use ARTstor by following the above steps but clicking on 'Logon' rather than 'Register'.

(Note that you have to enable pop-ups on your computer in order to use ARTstor. If you need to do this, go to Tools on your toolbar, and Options).

To search for images: Do a 'Keyword Search' in 'All Collections' (which is the default setting), or you can also just browse through the collections. Usually you'll just enter the artist's last name and/or the title, or culture and title - e.g., 'rembrandt night watch' or 'egypt pyramid'. I advise you to search in 'All Collections', though it's also possible to limit your search in a particular ARTstor collection if you have a reason for doing that. ARTstor is still working on the data that go along with the images so you sometimes have to be inventive and persistent in your searches if you're looking for something in particular. E.g., certain works can be listed under more than one title: if you enter 'Ingres Grande Odalisque' one image is pulled up, but there's also a second image of the same work listed as Reclining Odalisque. So if you're having trouble finding a particular image try browsing through all works by the artist. For general themes that interest you, try various possible keywords. See ARTstor 'Help' for searching tips if you get frustrated.

To limit your search, use the Advanced Search option. E.g., the best way to find images of Michelangelo's David is not just to search for 'Michelangelo' (far too many images!) or even 'Michelangelo David' (you get images of David by both Michelangelo and by Caravaggio, since Caravaggio's first name was Michelangelo), but in Advanced Search put 'Michelangelo' AND 'David' NOT 'Caravaggio'.

To select the best image: Often you'll find more than one image of the same art work. In that case you should compare their quality (in terms of color and focus) to decide which to take. You can double-click on the image to increase its size (here's where your pop-ups need to be enabled), and then you can double-click on another one in order to compare the two (the first image will have minimized when you enlarge the second one, but you can find it on your bottom bar and click it so it'll come up large on your screen next to the other image). You can also zoom in to see whether the details are focused - that's often the best way to tell which image is superior in quality. (Note that the images from the Art History Survey Collection tend to be better than the others.)

To collect your images into an image group: When you find an image that you want in your image group, click once on the image to highlight it (the frame will turn bright yellow). You can highlight as many images as you want. Then go to 'Image Groups' on the top toolbar, and hit 'Save selected images into new group'. You'll be prompted to select your Image Group Folder and you should choose the default setting of 'My Work Folder'. Then type in the name you want to give this image group, check 'Create New Group,' and hit 'Save' (or 'Save and Open' if you want it to open right away). You can keep adding images to that group (in fact, you can add more than you want because you'll have a chance later to arrange them and delete the ones you don't need). You can also create as many image groups as you'd like in your personal 'My Work Folder'. This folder is viewable only by you.

To arrange your images: Put images in the order you want them by clicking and dragging. Delete unwanted images by clicking on them to highlight in yellow, then click on 'Image Groups'on the toolbar and 'Delete Selected Images' (or once the image is highlighted, right click anywhere in the Image Group and you'll get a list of options including 'Delete'). You can continue adding and rearranging images as much as you want.

To send a link to your Image Group: Each Image Group has its own unique URL, including those in 'My Work Folder'. If you want to share the images you've collected in your work folder with your teacher or anyone else, open the image group, click on 'Image Groups' at the top and scroll down to 'Display Image Group URL'. The URL will appear in a box and you can highlight it and copy it (Control C), then paste it (Control V) into an e-mail.

II. The Millsaps I Drive

Now you need to save your images into the right format for showing in class (the Offline Image Viewer, on the Millsaps I drive, which is designated for digital images).

Mapping the I Drive: Every time you use a computer for the first time you have to map the I drive to that computer. This only needs to be done once for each computer, though if you're working in a computer lab that gets updated every month or every semester you might need to do this process periodically.

1) Right click on the 'My Computer' icon on the desktop. (If there's no icon, then find 'My Computer' by clicking on Start).
2) Left click on 'Map Network Drive'.
3) In the first space select the I drive.
4) In the second space type: \\mil-mdid\images$ (if this doesn't work, type the longer version: \\mil-mdid.milntdom.millsaps.edu\images$) and click Finish.

III. The Offline Image Viewer

This is the presentation format provided by ARTstor. The Offline Image Viewer (abbreviated OIV) is already installed on the library, lab, and classroom computers, but if you want to work from your own computer you need to download the OIV:

1) In ARTstor click on 'Tools' at the upper right, then 'Download Offline Viewer'.
2) Accept the conditions, and choose the most recent version (OIV 2.6 in 2006) for either Windows or Mac. Then follow the instructions. See ARTstor 'Help' for further guidance if needed.

IV. To transfer your ARTstor Image Group to the Offline Image Viewer

Open your Offline Image Viewer by clicking on the OIV icon on your screen (a square made up of smaller rectilinear shapes, with an arrow at the lower left corner) or go to Start (bottom left of your computer screen), Programs, Offline Image Viewer. Then click on 'open a new presentation' or go to File at the top left of the OIV, and hit 'New' to open a new Image Group (or 'Open' to get into an Image Group that you've already established). Once you've named your new Image Group, you can then import your ARTstor images by going to File, then Import Images, then Download Image Group from ARTstor. (Alternatively, you can click on the appropriate icon: in the Image Palette at the bottom, the leftmost icon enables you to add local images that you've saved on the I drive, e.g. from google (see below), and the next icon enables you to download an image group from ARTstor.)

You'll be asked to give your e-mail address and password, and then can choose which Image Group you want to import (note that you can't just click on the folder, you have to click on the specific Image Group within that folder). Once the process starts it'll take a few minutes, depending on how many images are in the group.

V. To save your Offline Image Viewer presentation on the I drive: Once you've transferred your image group, go to File and Save in the OIV. Scroll to the I drive and double-click on ARTstor Images. Double-click on the appropriate folder (e.g., your teacher's course folder) and give a name to your presentation (your last name in caps, then an abbreviated title - maybe the artist's name you're presenting).

VI. To add non-ARTstor images to your OIV presentation: Go to www.google.com, click on Images, and enter the artist's name and title that you're searching for. Then select 'Large Images' so you'll be sure to have an image that'll project well on the screen (fairly large-scale 'Medium' images work well too). You can also go directly to an excellent site for images, World Gallery of Art - www.wga.hu - and search their extensive collection. In addition, you can import images that you've taken with a digital camera or scanned from a book or slide and have on a CD or on your hard drive (there's a copy-stand, slide scanner, and flatbed scanner available in the art department). These should be large files, saved at the highest quality setting, in order for them to look good when they're enlarged on the screen. (In Photoshop I crop the image if needed, adjust the brightness/contrast levels, etc., and change the image size -- first select Resolution 96, then Pixel Width 1600)

If you find an image that you want on the web (either because it adds to the image group you've already collected in ARTstor or because it replaces a lesser-quality image from ARTstor), click to enlarge it on your screen. Then right click on the image, left click on Save Image, and save it on your hard drive with an appropriate title so you'll be able to find it later.

Once you've saved any additional images that you want, go back to the OIV and open your presentation. Now click on the leftmost icon in the Image Palette (at the bottom of the screen), go to where you've saved your images, and click on your image(s) to add.

VII. To fine-tune your presentation: Click and drag to get the images in the correct order and delete any that you don't want by highlighting the image (the frame around the image will turn bright yellow when you click on it) and then going to Edit - Delete. Now you have a choice of how to present your images in class:

A) You can create 'slides' that enable you to pre-set your comparisons and also add text. The work of making slides is done in the Slide Editor (the biggest area in the OIV). To start, click on the + sign, choose your format (e.g., single image, comparison slides, all text, zoomable image, etc.), then click and drag the image into the space. To add text, click on the icon that shows a 't'. To change the font or choose colors, click on the 'f'. There are more possibilities, shortcuts, etc., and the OIV Help button will give you more details. To show in class, open your presentation folder, double-click on the first slide in the Slide Sorter at the left, then advance through the slides by hitting the space bar (to go back to a previous slide, hit Page Up).

B) You can show your images directly from the Image Palette where they're initially saved. Just put them in the right order by clicking and dragging. In class you'll open your folder in the OIV and double-click on the first image to get started. You'll be able to zoom in on details, if you'd like, and can also make comparisons by hitting H or V (for a horizontal or vertical split of the screen). This method is easier at first because you don't have to create actual 'slides' (see below), but it's a bit harder in class because you have to learn some special keyboard commands if you want to do anything other than simply to one by one through the images.

To practice your presentation, double-click on the first image to enlarge it (then see instructions below about the various commands).

Here are some handy keyboard commands to use if you've chosen Option B (though you can also use the mouse and the toolbar at the top of the screen):

Space bar (or PageDown key) - to advance to the next image
Shift Space (or PageUp key) - to go to the previous image
H - to split the screen for a left-right comparison (the next image will automatically come
up on the right side) - you can also hit V to split the screen vertically (top & bottom)
F - to return to a single image on the full screen after a comparison (the default setting is
on the left side, so the left image will be the one that is enlarged on the full screen after you hit F; if you
want the right image to be enlarged instead, then first press Tab and then F)
+ (plus key) - zoom into the image (or click with your mouse on the image to zoom in
wherever you want, or to scan through the image)(or you can use the arrow keys to pan within the
image) - you can click multiple times to zoom in closer, though there'll come a point where the
image is no longer able to focus well
- (minus key) - zoom out of the image
F9 key - resize the image to full view after you've zoomed in
F1 - show brief data information (press again to hide the data)
F2 - show full data information (press again to hide the data)
F5 - go to an image that's not in sequential order (you'll get an image selection list)
Esc - close the presentation and return to the thumbnail view

VIII. To add more images from ARTstor to your OIV presentation: Add the images to your Image Group in ARtstor. Then go into your OIV presentation and download that same group (following the above instructions). The program will just import the new images that you've added.

IMPORTANT: Remember to save your presentation after any changes, and also be sure to save it on the I drive, under 'ARTstor Images' and the appropriate folder for your class.


 

 

 

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REQUIREMENTS FOR MAJORS

COURSES

SENIOR COMPS

GRADUATE SCHOOL

TIPS FOR WRITING PAPERS

AWARD-WINNING PAPERS

ART MEDIA

TIPS FOR EUROPE!!!

ART NOVELS & FILMS

ART HISTORY TIMELINE

LEWIS ART GALLERY
Check the Lewis Art Gallery schedule for recent exhibits.
      ART EMPHASES
The Millsaps Art Department offers degrees focusing on either studio art or art history.