Though it's not the full magazine, you can get a lot from Juxtapoz's website. The blogs in each category--including street art, illustration, and graffiti--are updated continuously, and each features interesting works with a little bit about the artist.
Called the “Tate Modern of the Internet,” Colossal is an international platform for contemporary art and visual expression that explores a vast range of creative disciplines. With an archive of over 6,000 articles written by seven contributors, Colossal prides itself in celebrating the work of both emerging and established artists through an ongoing commitment to make art accessible to everyone.
PRINT focuses on a broad stroke of visual culture today, covering everything from publication design to interactive work, motion graphics, corporate branding, exhibitions, illustration, and socially conscious design.
Delivers a daily mix of advice and inspiration for digital and traditional artists, web designers, graphic designers, 3D and VFX artists, illustrators, and more.
The American Institute of Graphic Arts is a professional organization that works "to enhance the value and deepen the impact of design across all disciplines on business, society, and our collective future."
The collection of the State Hermitage includes more than three million works of art and artefacts of the world culture. Among them are paintings, graphic works, sculptures and works of applied art, archaeological finds and numismatic material.
Founded in 1929 as an educational institution, The Museum of Modern Art in New York City is dedicated to being the foremost museum of modern art in the world.
Since 1996 the Art Museum Network has offered a platform for opinion about and collaboration among leading art museums. Edited by Maxwell L. Anderson, it seeks to provide new ideas about familiar challenges.
Using a combination of various Google technologies and expert information provided by museum partners, Google Cultural Institute has created a unique online art experience. Users can explore a wide range of artworks at brushstroke level detail, take a virtual tour of a museum, and even build their own collections to share.
With over 16 million items in its continually growing collections, the Archives is the world’s largest and most widely used resource dedicated to collecting and preserving the papers and primary records of the visual arts in America.
Access to almost four and a half million objects in more than two million records, from some of the earliest objects created by humankind to works by contemporary artists.