As US museums proceed to grapple with the aftermath of the Covid-19 pandemic, a number of have drawn correlations between the years-long droop in guests and cuts to their workforce. However as customer numbers start to stabilise, it stays unclear whether or not museums will reinstate these eradicated positions, a problem that has turn out to be extra pressing as funds are more and more allotted to different tasks.
The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York reported that it obtained over 861,000 guests in 2023, 33% fewer than it obtained in 2019. The museum laid off ten workers in December final 12 months, citing rising operational prices, inflation and a drop in guests and memberships because the pandemic as the explanation for the downsizing. The museum declined to remark additional.
Final summer time, the Guggenheim raised the value of grownup admissions from $25 to $30. Related value hikes had already been launched at museums just like the Metropolitan Museum of Artwork (which gives pay-as-you-wish admission solely to New York State residents and Tri-State space college students), the Whitney Museum of American Artwork and the San Francisco Museum of Fashionable Artwork (SFMoMA).
SFMoMA, which couldn’t be reached for remark as The Artwork Newspaper went to press, eradicated 20 positions in November final 12 months, shedding seven workers and selecting to to not backfill 13 roles. Christopher Bedford, the museum’s director, stated attendance had fallen 65% since 2019, writing in a press release that the drop mirrored “broader financial points” just like the drastic decline of foot site visitors in downtown San Francisco because the pandemic.
Some museums have been criticised for forging forward with multi-million-dollar renovation and enlargement tasks whereas concurrently reducing their workforce. In October final 12 months, the Dallas Museum of Artwork laid off 8% of its employees and decreased its opening hours throughout a refurbishment that’s projected to price as much as $180m. The choice affected 20 workers, two of whom had been demoted to part-time roles.
Amid a $100m renovation and enlargement of its campus, the Portland Museum of Artwork (PMA) in Maine lower 13 positions in February. In 2022 the museum settled an unfair labour practices criticism with 14 former workers who had been laid off. The PMA declined a request for an interview however in a press release stated that it had skilled a 35% drop in attendance since 2020 and that authorities credit to retain programming and employees would “quickly expire”.
The PMA states that round 70% of its working finances covers employees wages and advantages, and that the museum’s director, Mark Bessire, took a voluntary 20% wage lower. Nevertheless, the museum will transfer ahead with the redevelopment of its campus, which it argues is dated. As soon as the undertaking is full in mid-2025, it hopes to attract round 500,000 guests a 12 months, a dramatic increase from the 170,831 guests it obtained in 2019—numbers that can naturally name for extra employees.