![]() ![]() Simon and Theodore sit in lounge chairs, Alvin stands. Image description: Clay miniatures of sad, tired looking Alvin & the Chipmunks in a living room after a party. Shallow water creates surface reflections on their skin.Īlt-text: Painting of three views of the torso, legs, and hand of a light-skinned body in a bra and underwear. They wear a light pink bra and blue underwear. From left to right, the torso, legs, and left hand near hip are painted in soft beige, peach and pink colors. Image description: Realistic painting in three segments showing different parts of a light-skinned body floating in water. The bottom of each panel is labeled “strands display.” The bottom of each panel is labeled “strands display.”Īlt-text: Triptych of vertical panels showing black and white samples of a narrow, smoothly-curved calligraphic font composed of multiple strokes. The left two panels are typeset quotes from Haruki Murakami’s “The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle.” The rightmost panel is a radial composition of letters emanating from the center-top. Image description: Triptych of vertical panels showing black and white samples of a narrow, smoothly-curved calligraphic font composed of multiple strokes. A green laurel emblem appears below.Īlt-text: Drawing of a small village with yellow, pink, and green shapes intersecting on top and around it. Pink linework curves behind the shape, and a green cloud of birds bursts overhead. Image description: Relief print of a village scene of buildings and trees overlaid by an irregular mustard-colored shape. If identifying skin tone in an artwork, make sure you are describing the skin tone of ALL subjects in the piece. Those nuanced aspects of an artwork should be addressed in a title, caption, or longer-form image description and are not necessary to write in the alt-text field. ![]() Skin tone does not necessarily indicate a subject’s racial or ethnic identity. To describe skin tone, Cooper Hewitt suggests using the emoji terms for skin tone: light skin tone, medium-light skin tone, medium skin tone, medium-dark skin tone, and dark skin tone. While the goal of alt-text is to offer a basic outline of an image (not a nuanced image description), there may be times when describing the skin tone of subjects in a piece is relevant to the alt-text field. Cooper Hewitt offers guidelines on how to describe race when writing image descriptions.Since clothing is the main cultural signifier of gender expression in many cultures, nude subjects in artworks are unlikely to be expressing a specific gender and should not be gendered based on anatomy alone. Instead, simply describe what you see without relying on pronouns. If describing an artwork featuring a nude subject, refrain from ascribing a specific gender to the nude form, unless it is relevant to the work. If the subject is not clearly expressing a particular gender, simply use the singular “they.” If the gender expression of a person in an artwork seems clear and intentional, then it is appropriate to use pronouns to match (he, she, or they). In an artwork depicting human forms (not images of real people), you can assume that the artist is being intentional about showing (or not showing) cultural signifiers of gender expression through stylistic choices such as clothing.Instead of assuming gender, when it is relevant to the piece, describe the subject’s appearance using relevant characteristics such as hairstyle, clothing choices, build, etc. If describing images of real people, do not make assumptions about the gender of the subjects unless the subjects have confirmed their identities. ![]() ![]()
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