After two years of lockdowns and uncertainty, private loss and public turmoil, 2022 was the yr when most individuals may as soon as once more go and go to their favorite artwork or journey someplace new, with, normally, comparatively few restrictions. The outcome was that 141 million visits have been paid to the highest 100 artwork museums in our survey.
Are issues again to regular? Not fairly but. That 141 million is double the quantity we recorded final yr, and practically 3 times that of 2020. However there may be nonetheless some solution to go earlier than we regain the excessive watermark of 230 million visits in 2019, the final full yr earlier than the pandemic.
7.7m guests to Musée du Louvre in Paris—down simply 20% on 2019
And, as our evaluation reveals, the restoration is uneven. China’s zero-Covid technique has meant that its museum-goers needed to negotiate common lockdowns and draconian guidelines. Russian museums have needed to cope with their nation changing into a global pariah following its invasion of Ukraine, and tourism to and from many locations changing into restricted. Customer numbers in each nations have been just like 2021, at finest.
Elsewhere, some main museums have bounced again strongly—the Musée du Louvre in Paris is planning to limit customer numbers as a consequence of overcrowding however nonetheless managed to high our ballot with a rare 7.7 million guests in 2022, beating the second-placed Vatican Museums by greater than two and half million. London’s British Museum and Tate Trendy regain their locations in our high 5, however their recoveries have been extra sluggish than a few of their worldwide rivals, reflecting a sluggish bounceback by UK museums as a complete.
Taken collectively, the highest ten accounted for nearly 40 million visits. Now that the pandemic is basically over, individuals appear to going again to a lot the identical cities as they did earlier than: Paris and London, Rome and New York. For all of the efforts to get home audiences to go to extra, both nearly or bodily, it appears that evidently individuals couldn’t wait to journey to see the Mona Lisa, the Parthenon marbles and the Laocoön. These icons nonetheless draw the crowds.
UK not so OK
Elsewhere on this complement we report on the comparatively sluggish restoration of London’s main museums. Sadly, that is mirrored throughout the remainder of the UK. The Nationwide Gallery in London has the doubtful distinction of getting misplaced extra guests than another museum we surveyed, with practically 3.3 million fewer guests in 2022 than in 2019, the final yr earlier than Covid-19 hit. In share phrases, nonetheless, three different UK establishments did worse: Kettle’s Yard in Cambridge was down 57% on its 2019 guests, whereas V&A Dundee and the Wellcome Assortment in London have been each down 55%.
None of those museums was impacted by Covid-related closures in 2022, although Kettle’s Yard, situated in a former residential constructing, nonetheless had restricted capability. The UK had one of many earliest and quickest roll-outs of Covid vaccines on the earth and prided itself on getting again to regular as quickly as potential—face masks are actually a uncommon sight. So the rationale for the sluggish restoration of its museum customer numbers is difficult to pinpoint, particularly for these smaller museums that have been much less reliant on worldwide vacationers. It’s true, nonetheless, that almost all UK museums noticed robust year-on-year development in 2022, many tripling their attendance over the lockdown-affected 2021, so maybe subsequent yr will see a return to type.
Many UK museums tripled attendance over the lockdown-affected 2021, so subsequent yr may even see a return to type
The place have been the brightest spots within the UK? Principally north of the border. The Burrell Assortment in Glasgow reopened in March 2022 to a lot increased customer figures than beforehand, welcoming a powerful 483,000 guests. (Maybe individuals skipped a go to to town’s Kelvingrove museum, which received half of its 2019 determine.) Edinburgh museums did nicely, too, with the Nationwide Museum of Scotland receiving practically two million guests and the Scottish Nationwide Gallery 1.3 million, each just like pre-pandemic instances.
The UK’s most profitable paid-for exhibition of 2022 was not a blockbuster solo artist present, however Fashioning Masculinities: The Artwork of Menswear on the Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A), adopted by exhibits at Tate Trendy (Surrealism Past Borders on 158,843) and the Royal Academy of Arts (Francis Bacon: Man and Beast, 146,694). In the meantime, David Hockney introduced 221,950 free guests to the Fitzwilliam in Cambridge for Hockney’s Eye: The Artwork and Know-how of Depiction—a notable success for the medium-sized college gallery.
America nonetheless dreaming
Of New York’s main museums, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum had the most important share drop in guests, at 42% (with 750,000 in 2022 in comparison with 1.3 million in 2019), whereas the Metropolitan Museum of Artwork on Fifth Avenue noticed the most important fall in precise numbers, with 1.7 million fewer guests than in 2019 (a 34% drop). It must be famous that the Met has modified its counting methodology, introducing “a brand new, digital programme that we consider is extra correct”, says a spokesperson, that means a 20% lower to its beforehand reported determine in 2019.
New York was not alone in its sluggish restoration, with establishments throughout the nation nonetheless significantly down in comparison with 2019, from the Nationwide Museum of African American Historical past and Tradition in Washington, DC (down by 45%) to Denver Artwork Museum (34%) and the Getty Middle in Los Angeles (31%).
Essentially the most visited museum within the US was the Nationwide Gallery of Artwork in Washington, DC, with nearly 3.3 million guests in 2022.
Regardless of no widespread lockdowns within the US in 2022, the pandemic’s aftershocks nonetheless affected many museums
Regardless of there being no widespread lockdowns within the US in 2022, the pandemic’s aftershocks nonetheless affected many museums. A spokesperson for the Nationwide Portrait Gallery (NPG) in Washington, DC (which shares a constructing with the Smithsonian American Artwork Museum (SAAM) and due to this fact has the identical figures), says that it solely returned to its full opening schedule of seven days per week on the finish of Might, having been open for 4 days per week for the primary quarter of the yr. Regardless of practically tripling its 2021 determine, with 954,000 guests final yr, the NPG and SAAM have been nonetheless down 44% on pre-pandemic ranges.
Equally, the Frist Artwork Museum in Nashville was open seven days per week earlier than the pandemic, which helped it obtain its all-time file attendance of 359,000 in 2019. However since reopening in July 2020, its change to 5 days per week has contributed to a 60% fall.
Nonetheless, a handful of establishments reported figures that surpassed their pre-pandemic ranges. Two of those, the Huntington Library, Artwork Museum and Botanical Gardens in Los Angeles (up by 26%) and the Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park in Grand Rapids (up 3%), provided out of doors experiences as a part of the museum go to. (The Museum of Trendy Artwork in New York was additionally up 10%, however in 2019 it was closed for 4 months throughout renovations.)
Euro thousands and thousands?
Round Europe the image was blended. Whereas some large museums had sluggish recoveries, such because the Musées Royaux des Beaux-Arts de Belgique in Brussels (down 40% in comparison with 2019), the Neues Museum in Berlin (down 36%), the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam (down 35%) and the Museo Archeologico Nazionale in Naples (down 34%), on the entire, guests look like returning to museums.
The autumn in international tourism has been a consider many cities—Vienna’s Albertina recognized the drop by 1 / 4 within the variety of vacationers to the Austrian capital as a significant component in its customer numbers being down 26% in comparison with 2019. Nonetheless, different vacationer honeypots have been nearly again to regular—for instance, Musée d’Orsay in Paris, was inside 10% of its 2019 determine, whereas the Petit Palais was up 14%.
Fondation Louis Vuitton’s blockbuster exhibition of the Morozov Assortment had a staggering 1.2 million guests
Certainly, there have been some important jumps in attendance. In Paris, the Fondation Louis Vuitton noticed its figures rise by a 3rd, from simply over 1,000,000 in 2019 to nearly 1.4 million final yr, helped by its blockbuster exhibition of the Morozov Assortment, which had a staggering 1.2 million guests. An exhibition about Matisse’s The Pink Studio portray helped the Nationwide Gallery of Denmark in Copenhagen obtain its highest ever attendance, because it welcomed greater than 492,000 guests, whereas the Museum of Fantastic Arts in Budapest noticed a rise of 47% on 2019, helped by a Hieronymus Bosch blockbuster, the second hottest exhibition within the museum’s historical past.
One other approach of boosting attendance is to create extra space. The Kunsthaus Zürich opened a brand new extension in October 2021, serving to it double its 2019 tally of tourists to greater than 555,000. The Munchmuseet in Oslo, which moved to a brand new constructing in autumn 2021, welcomed nearly 852,000 individuals final yr, getting “considerably increased customer numbers than the outdated museum”, in line with a spokesperson.
A number of museums, such because the Centro Botín in Santander and Galleria dell’Accademia in Florence—dwelling to Michelangelo’s David— have reported numbers within the last months of 2022 choosing up and surpassing pre-pandemic ranges, pointing additional in direction of a wholesome restoration.
Zero to right here we go
China’s zero-Covid technique closely impacted on its museum customer numbers in 2022. And whereas Taiwan dropped its zero-Covid coverage in March 2022, a continuted lack of Chinese language vacationers meant that customer numbers to the Nationwide Palace Museum in Taipei remained low. The entire of 553,000 was simply 33% up on the earlier yr, and 86% down on the 2019 complete of just about 4 million.
One Chinese language museum that defied the development was M+. The Hong Kong museum opened in November 2021, earlier than having to close once more from 5 January till 21 April 2022 as a consequence of Covid restrictions. Regardless of this, it managed to draw greater than two million guests within the the rest of the yr, launching itself into our high 20.
Australia and New Zealand had a few of the strictest Covid-19 guidelines, which delayed their reopening in comparison with different components of the world. In Australia, guidelines have been complicated and different by state; the nation didn’t reopen to worldwide travellers till 21 February 2022. Regardless of this, customer numbers continued to get well steadily, with many venues regaining round two-thirds of their earlier numbers. The Artwork Gallery of South Australia in Adelaide truly did higher than pre-pandemic, with 539,000 guests. In Sydney, the Artwork Gallery of New South Wales noticed a lift to numbers as individuals flocked to see its new expanded constructing.
The Nationwide Museum of Korea cemented its excessive place in our listing: its 3.4 million guests earned it fifth place
A stand-out in Asia was South Korea. A Frieze artwork honest was held in its capital Seoul for the primary time, boosting customer numbers on the metropolis’s museums. The Nationwide Museum of Korea cemented its excessive place in our listing: its 3.4 million guests earned it fifth place. That is across the identical quantity of people that visited earlier than Covid. The 4 outposts of the Nationwide Museum of Trendy and Modern Artwork additionally did nicely, with its Seoul department receiving 1.8 million visits—400,000 greater than in 2019.
With most lockdowns hopefully behind us, we anticipate 2023 customer figures to be buoyant. However whereas some museums are settling again into their outdated groove, for others it looks like the harm brought on by the pandemic and the political responses to the disaster may be lengthy lasting.
• Venues marked with a dagger (†) point out establishments with multiple museum constructing. We’ve separated the venues to present a extra correct reflection of footfall. The establishments’ further venues and mixed totals are: Metropolitan Museum of Artwork (Met Cloisters: 196,247; complete for the Met: 3,405,079); NGV Worldwide (Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia: 331,488; complete for Nationwide Gallery of Victoria: 1,911,791); Scottish Nationwide Gallery (Scottish Nationwide Gallery of Trendy Artwork: 303,678; Scottish Nationwide Portrait Gallery: 222,977; complete for Nationwide Galleries of Scotland: 1,803,855); Reina Sofia (Palacio de Velázquez: 491,086; complete all three websites: 3,063,092); Getty Middle (Getty Villa: 405,883; complete for each: 1,395,185); Smithsonian American Artwork Museum (complete SAAM and Renwick Gallery: 1,149,245); Higher Belvedere (Decrease Belvedere: 279,648; Belvedere 21: 82,279; complete for Galerie Belvedere: 1,241,567). De Younger Museum (Legion of Honor: 360,820; complete for Fantastic Arts Museums of San Francisco: 1,158,264). *The Met revised its 2019 customer quantity to 4,898,474 as a consequence of a modified counting methodology **We’ve beforehand reported Reina Sofia venues as a mixed determine, however we now have cut up them this yr to be in step with different venues. ***NPG, Washington, DC, and SAAM share a constructing, therefore report the identical determine. We’ve due to this fact ranked them equally and counted these guests solely as soon as in our general totals.