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- Volume 1: Paleolithic through Late Antiquity
- Volume 2: Early Europe. Colonial Americas
- Volume 3: Later Europe, The Americas
- Volume 4: Indigenous Americas, Africa, West and Central Asia
- Volume 5: South, East, and Southeast Asia, The Pacific, and Global Contemporary
(SmartHistory, CC BY-NC-SA) Smarthistory’s free, award-winning digital content, including images, videos, and essays, unlocks the expertise of hundreds of leading scholars, making the history of art accessible and engaging to more people, in more places, than any other publisher.
website, hosted by the University of Iowa Stanley Museum of Art (UISMA), is a freely accessible educational resource that is the product of the collaborative efforts of more than fifty scholars, technicians, collectors and institutions around the world.
(SUNY, CC BY-NC) A constantly evolving and collectively authored online repository of art history teaching content including, but not limited to, lesson plans, video introductions to museums, book reviews, image clusters, and classroom and museum activities.
(CC BY-NC-4.0) The core intent of ArtxHistory is to offer an art history that replaces the dominant white, male, heteronormative, advantaged, celebrity narratives for a more inclusive history balanced with the work of women, artists of color, LGBTQIA+ persons, intersectional makers, and the self-taught.
Enter keywords in the “Search the Collection” box. On the results page, put a checkmark in the box for “Show only results with unrestricted images” to see images that are freely available to use (under public domain). For more information on using this site, see the LACMA blog Unframed
Images of public-domain works in The Met collection are available under Creative Commons Zero (CC0). So whether you’re an artist or a designer, an educator or a student, a professional or a hobbyist, you now have more than 375,000 images of artworks from our collection to use, share, and remix—without restriction.
The Heibrunn Timeline of Art History pairs essays and works of art with chronologies, telling the story of art and global culture through the Museum’s collection.
(SI, Public Domain and CC0). You can explore and reuse millions of digital items from the Smithsonian’s collections (2.8 million at February 2020 launch). We have released these images and data into the public domain as Creative Commons Zero (CC0), meaning you can use, transform, and share our open access assets without asking permission from the Smithsonian.
(Lumen Learning) An exposition of the philosophy, principles, and materials of music from the Baroque Period to contemporary period with illustrative examples from the Baroque Period, Classical Period, Romantic Period, Contemporary Classical Music and Popular Music.
(OER Commons) This course is designed to teach not only historical facts about music but also to encourage deeper listening to music from a variety of sources.
(Gotham et al., 2021) CC BY-SA 4.0 An open-source, interactive, online textbook for college-level music theory courses. Supports active student engagement with music in the theory classroom.