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Art: Citing references

A guide to finding information in art. Includes links to key resources and sources of help.

Whenever you refer to another person's work in your own essay, dissertation or article you must acknowledge them and give full details of your source. You risk being accused of plagiarism if you fail to do so.

The School of Art request that you use Chicago style for your referencing. More information about how to format references in Chicago style is in the box below. 

 

For general information on referencing, including an explanation of different citation systems, and guidance on citing specific types of publication, see our Citing references guide.

For help with citing specific types of publication contact your librarian (details below).

For advice on using references in your work, and how to use them to support your arguments, consult the guidance on the Study Advice website or make an appointment with them.

If you are on a Joint Honours programme, and are taking a module in another department like English Literature, Film Theatre & Television, Psychology or Philosophy you may be required to use that department's referencing style for that specific module's assessment - take a look at which referencing style is recommended by each department on our Citing references guide or check with our lecturer if you are unsure.

Chicago referencing summary and examples

Details of the books, articles, websites, art works and other formats of information you want to reference are entered using a note system. A note system has three elements;

  • A superscript number in the text, pointing your reader to the information about your source
  • A footnote or endnote corresponding to each superscript number, with details of your source (author, title, publication information.)
  • A Bibliography at the end of your document listing all your sources

Whenever you want to refer to something, insert a superscript number at the end of your sentence, after the full stop.1 Start at 1 then number each new reference consecutively - use a new number each time you reference something.

In Word, you can do this in the References ribbon >> Insert Footnote or Insert Endnote, and Word will create a corresponding numbered note either in the footer of the page (a Footnote,) or at the end of your document (an Endnote.)

In the corresponding footnote or endnote, you write the full reference for the item you want to refer to, with the specific page number, or page range, at the end.


1 Erich Hatala Matthes, Drawing the Line : What to do with the Work of Immoral Artists from Museums to the Movies (New York: Oxford University Press, 2021), 56.

As above, footnotes should have the first line indented by 1.27cm, and if the reference goes over two or more lines, justify subsequent lines to the left. In Word you can do this by expanding the Paragraph Settings on the home ribbon;

Paragraph settings on Home Ribbon in Word

 

 

 

 

 

 

Then under Indentation select First Line, 1.27cm;

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Capitalisation
Capitalise the first word of the title and subtitle, and any significant words (eg all words except short joining words and articles like the, and, it etc.) You should capitalise short joining words and articles where they are the first word of a subtitle, eg
Affinities: On Art and Fascination.

 

If you refer to the same source later in your writing, you should use a short version of the citation in your footnote or endnote - the short version usually includes only the author / creator's surname, a few key words from the title and a page number or page range;


2 Matthes, Drawing the Line, 142–143.
Page ranges
Separate page numbers in a range with an EN dash – not a hyphen -
You can do this by copying and pasting the EN dash earlier in this sentence or from the examples on the following pages. Alternatively in Word go to the Insert Ribbon >> Symbol >> Special Characters >> En Dash >> Insert.

 

At the end of your work, insert a Bibliography listing all your sources in alphabetical order of the author / creator's surname.

Bibliography

Matthes, Erich Hatala. Drawing the Line : What to do with the Work of Immoral Artists from Museums to the Movies. New York: Oxford University Press, 2021. 
Rezaire, Tabita. "Decolonial Healing: In Defence of Spiritual Technologies." In Health, edited by Bárbara Rodríguez Muñoz, 225–31. London: Whitechapel Gallery, 2020.
Schiwy, Freya. "Thresholds of the Visible. Activist Video, Militancy, and Prefigurative Politics." ARTMargins 8, no. 3 (October 2019): 7–28. https://doi.org/10.1162/artm_a_00242.

As above, each item in your bibliography should have a hanging indent (the first line justified left, and if the reference goes over two or more lines, indent subsequent lines by 1.27cm.) 

In Word you can do this by going back to the Paragraph Settings and selecting Hanging Indent, 1.27cm;

 

Footnotes and Bibliography references look different!
Your footnote / endnote citations look different to the Bibliography citations - in your notes, the author's name is Firstname Surname, the different elements of the reference are separated by a comma and the publication information is enclosed in parentheses.

In your Bibliography, the first author's name is reversed, Surname, Firstname, the different elements of the reference are separated by a full stop and publication information isn't in parentheses.

For more examples see the tabs across the top of this box.

 

This is written as a brief introductory guide - for full rules and guidance of the Chicago referencing style, please see section 14 of the
Chicago manual of Style, below

Footnote / Endnote - first time

1 Firstname Surname, Title of Book (City of Publication: Publisher Name, Year), page.

In Footnote / Endnote - subsequent short version

2Surname, Title, page.

In Bibliography

Surname, Firstname. Title of Book. City of Publication: Publisher Name, Year.

Example:

Footnote / Endnote - first time

Catharine Grant, A Time of One's Own: Histories of Feminism in Contemporary Art (Durham: Duke University Press, 2022), 79.

In Footnote / Endnote - subsequent short version

Grant, A Time of One's Own, 42–43.

In Bibliography

Grant, Catharine. A Time of One's Own: Histories of Feminism in Contemporary ArtDurham: Duke University Press, 2022.

 

Book details for example reference shown in Enterprise catalogue

Footnote / Endnote - first time

1 Firstname Surname, ed., Title of Book (City of Publication: Publisher Name, Year), page.

In Footnote / Endnote - subsequent short version

Surname, Title, page.

In Bibliography

Surname, Firstname, ed. Title of Book. City of Publication: Publisher Name, Year.

Example:

Footnote / Endnote - first time

Nina Möntmann, ed., Scandalous: A Reader on Art and Ethics (Stockholm: Royal Institute of Art, 2013), 97.

In Footnote / Endnote - subsequent short version

Möntmann, Scandalous, 115–116.

In Bibliography

Möntmann, Nina, ed., Scandalous: A Reader on Art and Ethics. Stockholm: Royal Institute of Art, 2013.

 

The title of the chapter goes in double quotation marks in plain text - follow this with the word 'in' before the book title in italics. Include the start and end page numbers for the chapter after the book title.

Footnote / Endnote - first time

1 Firstname Surname, "Title of Chapter," in Title of Book (City of Publication: Publisher Name, Year), page.

In Footnote / Endnote - subsequent short version

Surname, "Title," page.

In Bibliography

Surname, Firstname. "Title of Chapter." In Title of Book, page–page. City of Publication: Publisher Name, Year.

Example:

Footnote / Endnote - first time

Nicholas Thomas, "Landscapes: Possession and Dispossession," in Possessions: Indigenous Art/Colonial Culture/Decolonization (London: Thames and Hudson, 2022), 78.

In Footnote / Endnote - subsequent short version

Thomas, "Lanscapes," 109.

In Bibliography

Thomas, Nicholas. "Landscapes: Possession and Dispossession." In Possessions: Indigenous Art/Colonial Culture/Decolonization, 72–121. London: Thames and Hudson, 2022.

The title of the chapter goes in double quotation marks in plain text - follow this with the word 'in' before the book title in italics. Include the start and end page numbers for the chapter after the book editor.

Footnote / Endnote - first time

1 Firstname Surname, "Title of Chapter," in Title of Book, ed. Firstname Surname (City of Publication: Publisher Name, Year), page.

In Footnote / Endnote - subsequent short version

Surname, "Title," page.

In Bibliography

Surname, Firstname. "Title of Chapter." In Title of Book, edited by Firstname Surname, page–page. City of Publication: Publisher Name, Year.

Example:

Footnote / Endnote - first time

Tabita Rezaire, "Decolonial Healing: In Defence of Spiritual Technologies," in Health, ed. Bárbara Rodríguez Muñoz (London: Whitechapel Gallery, 2020), 226.

In Footnote / Endnote - subsequent short version

Rezaire, "Decolonial Healing," 228.

In Bibliography

Rezaire, Tabita. "Decolonial Healing: In Defence of Spiritual Technologies." In Health, edited by Bárbara Rodríguez Muñoz, 225–31. London: Whitechapel Gallery, 2020.

The title of the article is given in double quotation marks before the Journal title. Instead of a publisher and city of publication, (as for books,) the Volume and Issue number of the journal are given, with the month or season of publication and year. 

Footnote / Endnote - first time

1 Firstname Surname, "Title of Article," Title of Journal volume number, no. issue number (Month Year): page, DOI or URL.

In Footnote / Endnote - subsequent short version

Surname, "Title," page.

In Bibliography

Surname, Firstname. "Title of Article." Title of Journal volume number, no. issue number (Month Year): page–page. DOI.

Example:

Footnote / Endnote - first time

Freya Schiwy, "Thresholds of the Visible. Activist Video, Militancy, and Prefigurative Politics," ARTMargins 8, no. 3 (October 2019): 11, https://doi.org/10.1162/artm_a_00242.

In Footnote / Endnote - subsequent short version

Schiwy, "Thresholds," 14.

In Bibliography

Schiwy, Freya. "Thresholds of the Visible. Activist Video, Militancy, and Prefigurative Politics." ARTMargins 8, no. 3 (October 2019): 7–28. https://doi.org/10.1162/artm_a_00242.

Article details in Summon discovery service

Separate authors' / editors' names with the word 'and' - only invert the first name listed in the Bibliography entry. If they are editors, use the abbreviation 'eds.'

Footnote / Endnote - first time

1 Firstname Surname and Firstname Surname, Title of Book (City of Publication: Publisher Name, Year), page.

In Footnote / Endnote - subsequent short version

Surname and Surname, Title, page.

In Bibliography

Surname, Firstname, and Firstname Surname. Title of Book. City of Publication: Publisher Name, Year.

Example:

Footnote / Endnote - first time

Birgit Haehnel, and Melanie Ulz, eds., Slavery in Art and Literature (Berlin: Frank & Timme, 2010), 156.

In Footnote / Endnote - subsequent short version

Haehnel and Ulz, Slavery, 95.

In Bibliography

Haehnel, Birgit, and Melanie Ulz, eds. Slavery in Art and Literature. Berlin: Frank & Timme, 2010.

Separate authors' / editors' names with a comma then the word 'and' - only invert the first name listed in the Bibliography entry. If they are editors, use the abbreviation 'eds.'

Footnote / Endnote - first time

1 Firstname Surname, Firstname Surname and Firstname Surname, Title of Book (City of Publication: Publisher Name, Year), page.

In Footnote / Endnote - subsequent short version

Surname, Surname and Surname, Title, page.

In Bibliography

Surname, Firstname, Firstname Surname and Firstname Surname. Title of Book. City of Publication: Publisher Name, Year.

Example:

Footnote / Endnote - first time

1 Katharina Gsöllpointner, Ruth Schnell and Romana K. Schuler, eds. Digital Synesthesia: A Model For the Aesthetics of Digital Art (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2016), 12.

In Footnote / Endnote - subsequent short version

Gsöllpointner, Schnell and Schuler, Digital Synesthesia, 189.

In Bibliography

Gsöllpointner, Katharina, Ruth Schnell and Romana K. Schuler, eds. Digital Synesthesia: A Model For the Aesthetics of Digital Art. Berlin: De Gruyter, 2016.

In the Footnote / Endnote list only the first author's name, followed by 'et al.' In the Bibliography, list all the authors separating authors' / editors' names with a comma then the word 'and' before the last. Only invert the first name listed in the Bibliography entry. If they are editors, use the abbreviation 'eds.'

Footnote / Endnote - first time

1 Firstname Surname et al., Title of Book (City of Publication: Publisher Name, Year), page.

In Footnote / Endnote - subsequent short version

Surname et al., Title, page.

In Bibliography

Surname, Firstname, Firstname Surname, Firstname Surname and Firstname Surname. Title of Book. City of Publication: Publisher Name, Year.

Example:

Footnote / Endnote - first time

Christoph Behnke et al., Art in the Periphery of the Center (Berlin: Sternberg Press, 2015), 42.

In Footnote / Endnote - subsequent short version

Behnke et al., Art in the Periphery, 579–580.

In Bibliography

Behnke, Christoph, Cornelia Kastelan, Valerie Knoll and Ulf Wuggenig, eds. Art in the Periphery of the Center. Berlin: Sternberg Press, 2015.

For websites, it's sometimes not obvious who the author is - it's usual to use the name of the organisation responsible for the website instead. If you're unsure of the date the website was published, try one of the methods on Wikihow: 4 ways to find the publication date of a website

Footnote / Endnote - first time

1 "Title of Webpage," Organisation / Company responsible, last modified Month Date, Year, url.

In Footnote / Endnote - subsequent short version

"Title."

In Bibliography

Organisation / Company responsible. "Title of Webpage." Last modified Month Date, Year. url.

Example:

Footnote / Endnote - first time

"Abandoned Industrial Landscapes are Brought to Life in Sound," BBC Arts, last modified December 16, 2021, https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/articles/LZdW0CHbcc67BmGjBrPyTQ/abandoned-industrial-landscapes-are-brought-to-life-in-sound.

In Footnote / Endnote - subsequent short version

"Abandoned Industrial Landscapes."

In Bibliography

BBC Arts. "Abandoned Industrial Landscapes are Brought to Life in Sound." Last modified December 16, 2021. https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/articles/LZdW0CHbcc67BmGjBrPyTQ/abandoned-industrial-landscapes-are-brought-to-life-in-sound.

Footnote / Endnote - first time

Title, Location, Month Date, Year-Month Date, Year, Exhibition.

In Footnote / Endnote - subsequent short version

Title.

In Bibliography

Title. Location, Month Date, Year-Month Date. Exhibition.

Example:

Footnote / Endnote - first time

Yayoi Kusama: Infinity Mirror Rooms, Tate Modern, May 18, 2021-April 28, 2024, Exhibition.

In Footnote / Endnote - subsequent short version

Yayoi Kusama: Infinity.

In Bibliography

Yayoi Kusama: Infinity Mirror Rooms. Tate Modern, May 18, 2021-April 28, 2024, Exhibition.

For examples and guidance on how to format footnote and bibliography references for all other formats - videos, films, podcasts, social media posts, art installations and literally anything you can think of - take a look at the Cite them right guidance for Chicago style;

Chicago referencing

This online guide has examples of how to reference books, articles, conferences, archives, all different types of art works, performances and exhibitions, digital and social media - literally anything you can think of!

Cite them right chicago style

Get help from your librarian

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Natalie Guest
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Contact:
Get my help with finding relevant books and articles for your research, help with accessing library materials and collections, referencing and reference management software.

Email me with your question or book an appointment

0118 3783415
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EndNote

EndNote logoWhen you do your dissertation you could consider using EndNote to manage your references. This bibliographic management package can be used to store references, and then insert the citation in your Word document, automatically building the bibliography for you in the correct style.

Find out more on our EndNote webpages:

For information on other options for electronic management of your references see our guide to Managing references: