In CMS little guidance is given for citing images. Published images and illustrations can either be treated like a chapter of a book, or as a numbered section of a page. Depending on the subject, you may cite the artistic subject of a photograph or treat the photo as the cited artwork. In a presentation or paper that reproduces an image, you may need to credit both. The following guidelines are meant to help with the most important purpose of citation: providing enough information that your readers can find exactly the same image that you are referencing in your research. When citing, use the titles supplied in your source, and the abbreviation 'fig.' or the spelled out words: 'table,' 'map,' 'plate,' etc. (CMS16 14.165)
Note Number. Artist or Creator, "Image Title," medium, date of artwork, museum item number if available, (name of institution housing the original, city of that institution if not already stated) in Name of Book by Book Author, (Place Published: Publisher, Year), page, figure number.
1. Awa Tsireh (Alfonso Roybal), "Untitled (Bighorn Sheep and Rainbow)," watercolor on paper, ca.1928-30, (School for Advanced Research, Santa Fe, NM), in A Strange Mixture: the Art and Politics of Painting Pueblo Indians by Sascha T. Scott, (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2015), 170, fig. 5.11.
Note Number. Artist Name (Last Name only if cited previously), "Artwork Title," shortened source information, page(s), plate number.
15. Georgia O'Keeffe, "Grey Blue & Black--Pink Circle," oil on canvas, 1929, (Dallas Museum of Art), in Scott, Strange Mixture, 182, fig. 6.2.
Cite the source, not the individual images:
Author (Last, First). Book Title. Place published: Publisher, date.
Scott, Sascha T. A Strange Mixture: The Art and Politics of Painting Pueblo Indians. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2015.
11. Michelangelo Buonarroti, Tomb of Julius II, sculpture, completed 1545, (San Pietro in Vincoli, Rome), reproduced in Maria Ruvoldt, "Michelangelo's Slaves and the Gift of Liberty," Renaissance Quarterly 65 (Winter 2012): 1032, fig. 3. (Photo: Scala/Art Resource)
15. Michelangelo, Rebellious Slave, sculpture, 1513-15, (Louvre, Paris), in Ruvoldt, "Michelangelo's Slaves," 1030, fig. 1. (Photo: Réunion des Musées Nationaux/Art Resource)
Ruvoldt, Maria. "Michelangelo's Slaves and the Gift of Liberty." Renaissance Quarterly 65 (Winter 2012): 1029-1059.
When at all possible cite the original source of an image. DO NOT CITE GOOGLE IMAGES AS THE SOURCE OF AN IMAGE. Depending on the subject, you may cite the artistic subject of a photograph or treat the photo as the cited artwork. In a presentation or paper that reproduces an image, you may need to credit both. The following guidelines are meant to help with the most important purpose of citation: providing enough information that your readers can find exactly the same image that you are referencing in your research. When citing, use the titles supplied in your source.
Not all of the information below will be available for every image. Provide what you can.
Note Number. Artist or Creator, "Image Title," medium, date of artwork, museum item number if available, (name of institution housing the original, city of that institution if not already stated), Website Name, last modified date (if none, then accessed date), Website Sponsor, DOI (preferred) or URL
1. Quaker Oats Company, "Pure Quaker Oats," cylindrical cardboard box, ca.1930-40, Object ID 83.4.113, (The Stephen H. Hart Library & Research Center, Denver), History Colorado Online Collection, accessed November 24, 2015, History Colorado,
http://5008.sydneyplus.com/HistoryColorado_ArgusNet_Final/ViewRecord.aspx?template=Object&record=404c73ae-74ef-4ace-b3df-7512fdd4ba1b
Note Number. Artist Last Name, "Artwork Title," shortened source information, Website Name.
15. Quaker Oats, "Pure Quaker Oats," Object ID 83.4.113, History Colorado Online Collection
You may simply cite the source, or if you use only one thing from a collection, you may cite the individual image. In either case try to provide enough detail so that others can locate the object.
History Colorado Online Collection. The Stephen H. Hart Library & Research Center, Denver.
Quaker Oats Company. "Pure Quaker Oats." Object ID 83.4.113. History Colorado Online Collection. The Stephen H. Hart Library & Research Center, Denver. http://5008.sydneyplus.com/HistoryColorado_ArgusNet_Final/ViewRecord.aspx?template=Object&record=404c73ae-74ef-4ace-b3df-7512fdd4ba1b
The following is a hybrid of an online collection citation and an encyclopedia article. Note that the image title is italicized in this case, and the title of the Wikipedia entry is given in quotes.
11. Michelangelo Buonarroti, Tomb of Julius II with Michelangelo's statues of Rachel and Leah on the left and right of his Moses, sculpture, completed 1545, (San Pietro in Vincoli, Rome), Wikipedia: the Free Encyclopedia, s.v."Tomb of Pope Julius II," last modified August 9, 2015. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomb_of_Pope_Julius_II#/media/File:Rome-Basilique_San_Pietro_in_Vincoli-Moise_MichelAnge.jpg. (Photo: Jean-Christophe Benoist)
15. Michelangelo, Tomb of Julius II with... Rachel and Leah on the left and right, "The Tomb of Julius II," Wikipedia.
"Tomb of Pope Julius II." Wikipedia: the Free Encyclopedia. Last modified August 9, 2015. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomb_of_Pope_Julius_II
OR
Michelangelo Buonarroti. Tomb of Julius II with Michelangelo's statues of Rachel and Leah on the left and right of his Moses, sculpture, completed 1545. (San Pietro in Vincoli, Rome). From the article "The Tomb of Julius II." Wikipedia: the Free Encyclopedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomb_of_Pope_Julius_II#/media/File:Rome-Basilique_San_Pietro_in_Vincoli-Moise_MichelAnge.jpg. (Photo: Jean-Christophe Benoist)
In CMS little guidance is given for citing images (CMS 16th 14.165). The following guidelines are meant to help with the most important purpose of citation: providing enough information that your readers can find exactly the same image that you are referencing in your research. Because so many institutional archives are making their online collections available through ARTstor, your citation may be a hybrid of an online image and an archival resource.
Note Number. Artist or Creator, Image Title, medium, date of artwork, identifying number if available, (name of institution housing the original, city of that institution if not already stated), Collection Name, ARTstor, URL
1. "Helene [sic] Filene (Ladd) standing on a sidewalk with a camera in her hands," gelatin silver print, ca. 1914-1916, Photograph Number Catherine Filene Shouse Papers, 1878-1998, (Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard University), The Schlesinger History of Women in America Collection, ARTstor, http://library.artstor.org/library/secure/ViewImages?id=4iFLcDwwJloxLyk7ez54RA%3D%3D
15. Marshall, James A., "Earhart climbing out of the cockpit of her plane," gelatin silver print, July 1937, Photograph Number PC-29-1-1, Schlesinger History of Women in America Collection, ARTstor.
Bibliography
You may simply cite the source, or if you use only one thing from a collection, you may cite the individual image. In either case try to provide enough detail so that others can locate the object:
The Schlesinger History of Women in America Collection. ARTstor
Shouse, Catherine Filene. Papers, 1878-1998, Collection Number MC448. The Schelsinger History of Women in America Collection. ARTstor.
OR
"Helene [sic] Filene (Ladd) standing on a sidewalk with a camera in her hands," gelatin silver print, ca. 1914 - 1916. Catherine Filene Shouse Papers, 1878-1998, Photograph Number MC448-119-14. The Schlesinger History of Women in America Collection, ARTstor, http://library.artstor.org/library/secure/ViewImages?id=4iFLcDwwJloxLyk7ez54RA%3D%3D