Policy & Campaigns

Sally Wrampling
Head of Public Affairs
swrampling@artfund.org

Johanna Kociejowski
Public Affairs Manager
jkociejowski@artfund.org

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Image: Celtic, Celtic Desborough mirror, 1st Century. British Museum, London. ArtFunded 1924

GENERAL FAQS ABOUT MUSEUMS

Does The Art Fund campaign to safeguard local museum services?

The Art Fund is concerned that local authority-owned museums across the UK are facing difficulties – and in some cases, total closure – because of council budget cuts. It seems that heritage services, including museums and galleries, are often first in the firing line when savings are to be made.

The Art Fund unfortunately cannot campaign to save every museum faced with closure but steps in where possible if we believe access to or care of the collection is under threat.

We are currently working with a number of local museums to help safeguard future access to their collections. We have been instrumental in helping to save a number of museums from the threat of closure over the years, including Hatton Gallery in Newcastle, Pickford’s House Museum in Derby and Fleetwood Museum, Lancashire.

My local museum is closing. What can I do?

If you are unhappy that a local museum is to close, there are several things you can do.

Visit the museum: Firstly, visit the museum and talk to staff or other visitors to learn more about the plans and to see how, if needed, you might be able to help. There may already be a local group campaigning to save the museum that you can get involved with.

Write to your council or MP: If the museum is owned by a local authority, you can write to the Leader of the Council to voice your concerns. Details of how to contact your council can usually be found in your local library, newspaper or on the council’s website.

You can also contact your local MP – find out who your local MP is here. The best way to is usually by letter or email, but you can also go along to one of their regular surgeries. Again, details of when and where surgeries are held can be found in your local library, newspaper or on the MP’s website.

Get in touch with the Art Fund: Contact Us at The Art Fund and let us know if you are concerned about your local museum. While The Art Fund cannot campaign to save every museum from closure, we may be able to offer assistance or advice.

My local museum is planning to sell a work of art from its collection. Is it allowed to do this?  

Legally, museums can sell objects from their collections, but ethically such sales are questionable.

The Code of Ethics for Museums (as drawn up by the Museums Association) states that there is a ‘strong presumption against the disposal of any item from a museum’s permanent collection’. The Code advises against selling an object as a first step, and only countenances sale once a museum has tried and failed to donate the object to another registered museum.

If a museum does sell a work of art from its permanent collection without following the accepted guidelines, it may be stripped of its ‘accredited’ status, which means that it will no longer be eligible for many external sources of funding – including grants from The Art Fund.

How can I support a campaign to save a work of art?

You can join The Art Fund! The Art Fund exists to make great art available for everyone to enjoy. With the help of our members, over the years we have campaigned to save countless art treasures for UK public collections, from Velázquez’s Rokeby Venus for the National Gallery in 1906, to the Macclesfield Psalter for the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, in 2005.

If The Art Fund is campaigning or planning to campaign to save a particular work of art we always let our members know – through our website, our magazine Art Quarterly, our e-newsletters and often through local events.

If you are concerned about a work of art or another issue in your local museum, please contact us.

GENERAL FAQS ABOUT MUSEUMS

What is a museum?

Museums are institutions that hold collections a definition that includes art galleries with collections of works of art, as well as museums such as the British Museum, with historical collections of objects.

The Museums Association, the trade body for the sector, agreed a definition in September 1998: 'Museums enable people to explore collections for inspiration, learning and enjoyment. They are institutions that collect, safeguard and make accessible artefacts and specimens, which they hold in trust for society.'

How many museums are there in the UK?

There is no complete listing of the number of museums in the UK but it is estimated that there are approximately 2,500.

Around 1,800 museums are accredited by the Museums, Libraries and Archives Council (MLA). Registration under the MLA Accreditation Scheme signifies that a museum has achieved nationally approved standards in museum management, collection care and the information and services they offer to visitors. It shows that the museum is a suitable home for collections that are part of our common heritage. It also means that the museum can apply for and receive support from a wide range of sources, including The Art Fund.

There are several different ‘types’ of museum, depending on how they are owned, managed and funded. Of the 1,800 or so accredited museums:

The remaining museums are a mix of English Heritage properties and museums associated with the armed services.

How many museums are there in my region?

The approximately 1,800 museums in the UK are spread as follows:

East Midlands

96

East of England

163

London

137

North West

223

Northern Ireland

37

Scotland

265

South East

257

South West

227

Wales

80

West Midlands

141

Yorkshire

164

How many people visit UK museums each year?

Estimates for visitor numbers to museums in the UK vary, but the average number lies between 80 million and 114 million people annually. The figures vary because different museums count visitors and visits in different ways.

In 2005 museums and galleries made up seven of the top ten visitor attractions in the UK, according to figures prepared by the Association of Leading Visitor Attractions.

4.5 million visitors made the British Museum the UK’s most visited museum in 2005.

The top ten UK visitor attractions in 2005 were as follows:

 1.Blackpool Pleasure Beach

 2.British Museum

 3.National Gallery

 4.Tate Modern

 5.British Airways London Eye

 6.Natural History Museum

 7.Science Museum

 8.Tower of London

 9.Victoria and Albert Museum

10.Tate Britain


How many people work in museums in the UK?

The number of paid workers in UK museums is estimated at around 40,000, although figures vary considerably according to the source.

In 1999 the Labour Force Survey reported 37,075 employed workers in Britain's museums, although this figure is likely to cover all jobs in museums, and not just those that are museum-specific (so it includes IT specialists as well as conservators and curators). Thus the number of full-time permanent museum-specific positions may be closer to 10,000-15,000.

The sector also has a large representation of volunteers as part of its workforce, and an estimated 20 per cent of museums do not employ paid staff at all.

 
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