- The Public Art New Article Guide will greatly assist you by setting up an infobox and standardized headings for your article about public art using a step-by-step process.
- It has been created so that new users can quickly start working in Wikipedia.
Decide on a username.
- Note that sharing an account is not allowed in Wikipedia, so if you work for an organization, you should not create an account for your organization as a whole.
- Click on the blue link "Create Account" in the top right corner of the screen.
- Click on the blue link "Create One" in the sign in box.
- Fill out the information on the page (email is not necessary) and click the "Create Account" button.
- Your username will now appear in red in the top right corner of the screen.
Begin this tutorial to get you started on basic editing, formatting, and citation guidelines.
- Introduction
- Editing: After you finish reading this tab, be sure to Try Editing in the Sandbox as they suggest.
- Formatting: After you finish reading this tab, try to add bolding, italics & headings in the Sandbox.
- Wikipedia Links: After you finish reading this tab, try to add some links and categories in the Sandbox.
- Citations: After you finish reading this tab, try out using the reference markup code in the sandbox.
It is important that you read about the Five Pillars of Wikipedia.
- Wikipedia is an Encyclopedia
- Neutral Point of View Policy
- No Original Research Policy
- Verifiability Policy
- Notability Policy
Create a subpage (sandbox)
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- Edit your userpage and add a link that begins with your username, followed by a forward slash (/) and the name you would like to use for your article.
- Save the page and you'll see a new red link.
- Click the red link and add text to the edit box...your sandbox is created!
Name your article
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Naming convention guidelines do not apply to your sandbox, but they are important later when you move your article to Wikipedia main namespace.
- Try and use the correct name for the artwork, otherwise use the common name and keep the title as accurate and simple as possible.
- If the proper name of the artwork is used, then it should be italicized throughout the article, including in the title. See the notes inside the template for guidance on this.
- If the artwork's name already exists within Wikipedia, or if another artwork of the same title already exists:
- See the Visual Arts Manual of Style for more details.
Add the public art template
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- Copy the following text and paste it into your new subpage: {{subst:Public art article}}
- Save the page and include a note in the Edit summary such as "Public art template".
- Edit your new article!
- When you return to the Edit screen of your article again there will be detailed instructions for filling out the template.
- The template includes an empty Infobox to be filled out.
- There are also detailed suggestions concerning the content to be placed under each heading.
- Be sure to remove the comment boxes that are in <brackets> once you fill out the headings appropriately.
Add your research
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Use the Public Art Style Guide for step-by-step instructions for filling out the components of your article, including:
- Formatting for the infobox (code for image, image size, dimensions, geotagging, etc.)
- Using references
- Uploading photos
- Inserting GPS coordinates
- Adding links to the "See also" & "External links" section
- Adding and creating navigation boxes
- Using Categories
Make your article live
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- If you have now edited a significant amount of content, will be able to Move your draft to make it live. The Move button will appear on the right hand side of your article draft; click it and follow the instructions.
- See the Public Art Style Guide for more information on adding Categories, Tags, and Navigation boxes.
- If your article is a stub, add the {{public-art-stub}} at the very bottom of the main article page.
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