The Visual Resources Collection (VRC) is a digital collection of over 100,000 images of art, architecture and design formed for the purposes of teaching and research. The digital images found on JSTOR are the result of image requests from faculty and students in the Department of Art and Art History; collection development work, especially of non-Western art; and images from art collections and exhibitions across the UT Campus. The VRC also has a physical slide component, which you can read more about in the 'History' tab.
The VRC's images are on JSTOR as an Institutional Collection named the "Fine Arts Visual Resources Collection". What that means is that UT Libraries, along with other institutions, have placed their images on this site for the use of their own faculty, students and staff. You will not see the holdings of other institutions' collections on JSTOR unless the institutions have made their collections public. The decision to move the VRC Collection to JSTOR was made to ensure that the images from this collection would continue to be available online after the VRC's current UT host, DASE (Digital Archive Services) and the database, Artstor, is no longer available. And with this move, the VRC will benefit from the platform which provides quick presentation views, zooming in for detail views, and automatic image citations.
For more information about how to find images on JSTOR, please click the 'Finding VRC Images on JSTOR' tab on the left of the guide. If you have any further questions, please contact us.
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Updated regularly. Offers a high-quality, interdisciplinary archive to support scholarship and teaching. Includes archives of over 1,000 leading academic journals across the humanities, social sciences, and sciences, as well as select monographs and other materials valuable for academic work. The entire corpus is full-text searchable, offers search term highlighting, includes high-quality images, and is interlinked by millions of citations and references.
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In 1938 The College of Fine Arts was founded with departments of Art, Music and Drama. The Visual Resources Collection had its start around 1940 and with the hiring of Art Historian Marian B. Davis in 1945, its first strong advocate. Davis, along with other founding members of the Art History program, began to gather slides from Museum offerings, early commercial suppliers such as Color Slides Cooperative and Prothmann and donations from Texas artists like Everett Spruce and Charles Umlauf. By 1961, the Collection had over 34,000 slides, although they remained uncatalogued and searches were still problematic. Starting in 1961 a new system of cataloging was begun, using the Fogg Museum Classification System and the Metropolitan Museum of Art Slide classification system, a classification system which continued to be used until digital formatting fully replaced slides in 2008. From the very first, the goal of the VRC was to provide images for teaching and research for Art History and Studio Faculty and Students, as well as those in other departments on the UT campus.
The hiring of Nancy S. Schuller as curator of the Visual Resources Collection in 1967, a position she held for the next 34 years until her retirement in 2001, proved to be an exceptionally important one. Schuller not only helped grow the collection of slides to over 550,000 and one of the largest University Slide Collections in the United States, but also became a pivotal figure in the founding of the Visual Resources Association, helping to train other Visual Resources Collection specialists all over the country through her publications and seminars. She was also ahead of her time in seeing the usefulness of computers for VRC collections and in 1967-68 began working on a digital computer system with a standard thesaurus of terms that would give image searchers a multipoint access system to images by artist, title, keyword and so forth. Schuller wanted a computer access system that would allow in-depth, creative research and show the relationships among works of art, artists and periods – goals that Visual Resources Collection specialists still strive for today.
Starting in 2001, the Visual Resources Collection, under the leadership of Art Historian, Dr. Sigrid Knudsen, began to acquire digital images in earnest. In-house, high-quality TIFF format digital images have been created since 2004. For the display of these digital images, Knudsen worked with the College of Liberal Arts, the College of Fine Arts and the General Libraries to develop the password protected DASe, (Digital Archives Services), one of the digital data bases at UT Austin. During these years, until Knudsen retired in 2009, the Visual Resource Collection participated in the licensing of the digital collections of images of Archivision and the Allan T. Kohl Collection and the digitization and subsequent display on ARTstor of the Jackie Barnitz Collection of Latin American Art and the Ferguson/Royce Archive of Maya sites. The Visual Resources Collection also worked with the Blanton Museum to place a growing number of the Blanton Museum holdings on DASe. At the same time, Dr. Knudsen oversaw the entering of catalog information for over 218,000 slides from accession cards into a searchable database. In 2009, the Visual Resources Collection made the move from the Department of Art and Art History to become part of the Fine Arts Library. The slide collection is now currently located at the Collections Deposit Library.
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