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Museums and Exhibitions Week 6. 18,000-20,000 museums in U.S. today 3/4s of world’s museums created since 1945 From “being about something to being for.

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Presentation on theme: "Museums and Exhibitions Week 6. 18,000-20,000 museums in U.S. today 3/4s of world’s museums created since 1945 From “being about something to being for."— Presentation transcript:

1 Museums and Exhibitions Week 6

2 18,000-20,000 museums in U.S. today 3/4s of world’s museums created since 1945 From “being about something to being for somebody”

3 Since WWII, in U.S. huge increase in #s of museums: – Growing audience (baby boom, increase in college education) – New sources of funding: 1960s creation of NEA and NEH Private foundations Growth in local arts councils – Increased professionalization of museum staff – “new” social history – new kinds of stories

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5 Decline in government (federal) funding for museums: – 2008 study by IMLS – most museums receive 7%- 24% of funding from govt sources Support mostly for projects (e.g., exhibitions) Only 4% from NEA and 8% from NEH (nearly half through Congressional earmarks) – 2006, NEA distributed $12.3 million to museums

6 Sources of Support for All Museums in Sample, by Type, FY 2006 Source of SupportPrivate Earned Investment Government Art Museums 23.3% 46.1% 17.5% 13.1% Children’s Museums 24.4% 48.1% 20.5% 6.9% History Museums 32.9% 21.6% 13.2% 33.2% Natural History and Natural Science 29.5% 41.6% 5.7% 23.6% Science and Technology Museums 22.8% 42.8% 4.0% 30.4% Historical Societies 32.2% 21.5% 24.7% 21.6% Arboretums and Botanical Gardens 34.1% 28.9% 13.7% 23.3% Zoos, Aquariums and Zoological Societies 17.4% 60.3% 4.2% 18.1% Hybrid and Other 27.2% 38.5% 9.6% 27.5% Overall 24.4% 43.7% 12.2% 19.7% Source: Urban Institute analysis, IMLS Museum Public Finance Survey, 2008.

7 Median Operating Income by Source and Type of Institution, FY 2006 Source of Support Private Earned Investment Government Art Museums $429,775 $190,393 $56,250 $144,802 Children’s Museums $357,550 $490,345 $600 $50,000 History Museums $46,187 $26,120 $695 $32,182 Natural History and Natural Science Museums $11 0,309 $408,321 $4,500 $86,465 Science and Technology Museums $350,000 $898,911 $12,602 $289,970 Historical Societies $32,727 $23,000 $3,023 $7,751 Arboretums and Botanical Gardens $251,355 $253,226 $14,128 $130,000 Zoos, Aquariums and Zoological Societies $437,706 $2,686,310 $15,277 $911,480 Hybrid and Other $59,171 $48,267 $1,000 $36,737

8 Inward to outward focus “story rich but artifact poor” institutions growing influence of museum educators (and declining role of curators) Concerns regarding relevance – What impact can a museum claim? – How can that impact be measured or demonstrated? – Who benefits from museums’ efforts to have impact on communities?

9 No Child Left Behind Decline in museum field trips BUT teachers relying heavily on museums to enhance their own learning (via actual and virtual visits)

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14 Exhibitions influenced by Mission Funding Resources – staff; collections; research Audience – actual and desired


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