Contemporary computer art, fine art, and archaeology/anthropology-related collections highlight recent additions to ARTStor. Text below from ARTStor has been edited for brevity.
Rhizome ArtBase: a Web-based archive of works that employ technologies in significant ways and contains more than 2,500 artworks by artists from around the world who use materials such as code, software, websites, games, and browsers to aesthetic and critical ends.
The Corcoran Gallery of Art offers approximately 1,200 images from the Gallery’s permanent collection. The collection focuses primarily on American works from the 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries, as well as some European works.
25,000 additional images of Pre-Columbian, African, Native North American, and Oceanic objects fromThe Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology at Harvard University: This brings the current available total to more than 28,000 of a projected 154,000 images from the Museum’s collection.
500 photographs of pre-Columbian artifacts from Justin Kerr and Barbara Kerr : The collection consists of still and rollout photographs of vases, plates, and bowls from the various cultures of Mesoamerica. The rollouts—which show the entire surface of an object in a single frame—were made by photographer Justin Kerr with a camera he designed and built. The objects in the collection depict a variety of everyday Mayan activities and religious concepts, and stem from archaeological sites, museums, and collections throughout Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, Belize, the United States, Canada, and Europe.
New York School of Interior Design (NYSID) has shared approximately 350 images of pochoir prints of interiors by well-known Parisian interior designers and photographic depictions of interior retail architecture and design in Paris dating from 1928-1932.