Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης
22 Σεπ 2020 · This is part of what’s known as a credit line. In the museum’s permanent galleries, you can assume that the Art Institute is the owner of an object unless another one is named. The works presented in special exhibitions may come from many sources, so all of the labels specify the institutions or individuals who lent the works.
20 Αυγ 2024 · A credit line for an image includes: Artist’s Name, Title of Work in Italics, Year, Medium/technique, dimensions (H x W x D), Image Source with shortened direct hyperlink to the image. The credit line should be placed right next to or below the image.
We use "credit lines" such as "acquired/restored with the support of" or "donation by" in our publications. What is your experience using these? Is it mandatory (or by contract) to include them next/close to the image of the work?
1 Νοε 2022 · A credit line is a list of important facts about a work of art. This information is displayed along side a work of art and contains at least 6 facts. o Name of the artist. o Title of the work...
22 Φεβ 2024 · A credit line is what you include alongside your art whenever and wherever it is shown: your website, social media, printed material, or a wall label. The credit line includes your name, Title of the piece (in italics if possible), Medium and/or technique, Dimensions (if online or in print), and Photography credit (if online or in print).
When using an image from the CMCH collection in any way other than for personal use, there are three things to be aware of: the credit line, citations, and copyright. A credit line acknowledges, in a caption that appears next to a reproduction, the source of the reproduction.
Credit lines for images licensed via photo vendors should adhere to the terms of the license. Typically, vendors specify a particular format which includes the individual photo credit, the library or collection the image belongs to as well as the name of the vendor.