Mid-Manhattan Library’s Renowned Picture Collection
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Sunday, April 5, 2026


Mid-Manhattan Library’s Renowned Picture Collection



NEW YORK.- For nearly 90 years, New York’s artistic and educational community has found a valuable and dependable source of inspiration in a unique resource at The New York Public Library: the Picture Collection. Housed on the third floor of the Mid-Manhattan Library since 1982, the more than one million images there are at the disposal of some 140,000 visitors each year, fueling the creativity of commercial artists and illustrators, fashion designers, scenic designers and art directors for theater and film, as well as teachers and students at schools of fine and applied arts. Now, through a major initiative to digitize 30,000 images by the end of 2003 in some of the most popular subject areas, people can tap into this resource from any computer via the Internet, by simply logging onto picturecollection.nypl.org.

Organized into more than two dozen subjects -- including, for example, African Americans, American History, Costumes, Fashion Drawings, New York City, Dragons, and Animals -- the digitized images date from the 1700s through the first quarter of the 20th century, and are drawn from the Picture Collection’s vast reference holdings of images clipped from books, newspapers, and magazines. The online database also includes digitized copies of original photographs, prints, and postcards from the collection.

“The purpose of the Picture Collection Online is to make these valuable visual resources more widely and readily available, so that our many users can browse the collection from the comfort of their home, school, office, or studio,” said Mary K. Conwell, Director of The Branch Libraries. “These easily accessible digital images -- which document local history, costumes of various dates and places, and a variety of other topics -- should prove to be an important creative tool for anyone seeking visual ideas.” 

Three [New York City] park employees catching a big snake, 1906. The New York Public Library, The Branch Libraries. Picture Collection.

While the visitors to the Mid-Manhattan Library’s physical Picture Collection are typically professionals and students from New York City and the tri-state area working in the creative arts, the Picture Collection Online can be accessed and used by anyone and at any time. Teachers and students, including those in elementary and secondary school, will find a ready resource for use in the classroom: the images, which are not readily available anywhere else, record the history and culture of people and places around the world, and they also demonstrate how the artists and photographers who created them saw the world in which they lived.

NEW YORK.- For nearly 90 years, New York’s artistic and educational community has found a valuable and dependable source of inspiration in a unique resource at The New York Public Library: the Picture Collection. Housed on the third floor of the Mid-Manhattan Library since 1982, the more than one million images there are at the disposal of some 140,000 visitors each year, fueling the creativity of commercial artists and illustrators, fashion designers, scenic designers and art directors for theater and film, as well as teachers and students at schools of fine and applied arts. Now, through a major initiative to digitize 30,000 images by the end of 2003 in some of the most popular subject areas, people can tap into this resource from any computer via the Internet, by simply logging onto picturecollection.nypl.org.

Organized into more than two dozen subjects -- including, for example, African Americans, American History, Costumes, Fashion Drawings, New York City, Dragons, and Animals -- the digitized images date from the 1700s through the first quarter of the 20th century, and are drawn from the Picture Collection’s vast reference holdings of images clipped from books, newspapers, and magazines. The online database also includes digitized copies of original photographs, prints, and postcards from the collection.

“The purpose of the Picture Collection Online is to make these valuable visual resources more widely and readily available, so that our many users can browse the collection from the comfort of their home, school, office, or studio,” said Mary K. Conwell, Director of The Branch Libraries. “These easily accessible digital images -- which document local history, costumes of various dates and places, and a variety of other topics -- should prove to be an important creative tool for anyone seeking visual ideas.” 

Three [New York City] park employees catching a big snake, 1906. The New York Public Library, The Branch Libraries. Picture Collection.

While the visitors to the Mid-Manhattan Library’s physical Picture Collection are typically professionals and students from New York City and the tri-state area working in the creative arts, the Picture Collection Online can be accessed and used by anyone and at any time. Teachers and students, including those in elementary and secondary school, will find a ready resource for use in the classroom: the images, which are not readily available anywhere else, record the history and culture of people and places around the world, and they also demonstrate how the artists and photographers who created them saw the world in which they lived.













Today's News

April 5, 2026

The Parsonage Garden returns to Groninger Museum after major restoration

Edward Steichen's floral legacy debuts at George Eastman Museum

Hauser & Wirth Basel unveils rare works by Niklaus Stoecklin

Katya's Space CIC presents group exhibition at The Crypt Gallery

Hammer Museum unveils ambitious spring 2026 season

Christo and Jeanne-Claude's unrealized dreams debut in Münster

'The Marquise de Seignelay' by Pierre Mignard to travel the UK for the National Gallery Masterpiece Tour's second year

Peter Campus debuts 'Videographs' at Cristin Tierney Gallery

Julian Lucas interrogates the stratified American Dream in first solo museum show

Samuel de Saboia unveils 'The Aesthetics of Possibility' in Knokke

Landmark Albert Uderzo Astérix and Obélix cover headlines Heritage's April 18-19 International Comic Art Auction

Eve Biddle debuts elliptical silk-screened archives at Sargent's Daughters

29% rise in visits to the National Gallery in 2025 after Bicentenary and re-opening of Sainsbury Wing

The hidden universe of Franne Davids' decades-long obsession on view at Sebastian Gladstone

Eleven artists disrupt the 'Eurocentric lens' of Dutch colonial film archives

Ilmin Museum launches 'Gi.Gi.Gi' to map the fissures of contemporary reality

Bo Bartlett returns to Miles McEnery with masterful new figurative works

Threads of memory and rainbows of resilience: Crow Museum unveils 2026 spring season

New exhibition explores how the sense of touch is inherent in Japanese art

Sachiko Akiyama's dreamlike wood carvings debut in new solo survey at Center for Maine Contemporary Art

Oliver Lee Jackson makes Asia debut at Lisson Gallery

Olney Gleason unveils a century of myth, eroticism, and stage design

ICA/Boston unveils major facade installation by Derrick Adams

Bulgaria unveils 'The Federation of Minor Practices' at the 61st Venice Biennale




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



The OnlineCasinosSpelen editors have years of experience with everything related to online gambling providers and reliable online casinos Nederland. If you have any questions about casino bonuses and, please contact the team directly.


sports betting sites not on GamStop

Truck Accident Attorneys



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)


Editor: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez


Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
       
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful