Remember when museum shops were sleepy little corners where you could purchase postcards
of art from the museum’s collection and a catalog or two, usually long on academic analysis and
short on color pictures? Those days are long gone.
Museum stores now occupy significant square footage and high-profile display space. They offer a vast array of merchandise, from
trinkets to pricey reproductions, jewelry and even original artwork.
The items for sale often no longer have a direct connection
to the museum’s collections or exhibitions, but are considered
an extension of the museum’s “aesthetic” sensibility, curated to
appeal to the taste level of the museum’s demographics. Museums
now have multiple satellite stores, remote locations, elaborate
websites and even exterior entrances to allow shopping when the
museum isn’t open.
Museum shops have evolved into important components of
a museum’s operations. Gift shops in newer buildings have been
planned to be architecturally integrated into museums and to
reflect the aesthetic point of view. They’ve been created with marketing
techniques in mind, integrated into exhibition spaces and
offer targeted merchandise at multiple price points, in addition to
the traditional museum-branded merchandise.
CULTURE MEETS COMMERCE
Museums and cultural institutions have their critics, who say
these once-august and pure places have been co-opted by high
entry prices and the sale of luxury goods. But museums beg to differ.
While museums (and other cultural institutions) toe a fine line
between art and commerce, they say they have no choice.
ORIGINAL CHIHOULY ARTWORKS WERE OFFERED FOR SALE AT THE NEW YORK BOTANICAL
GARDENS’ STORE. THESE WERE A PERFECT “ORGANIC” EXTENSION OF THE MUSEUM’S LUSH
AND DIVERSE HORTICULTURAL EXHIBITIONS.
“Cultural institutions are under tremendous financial pressure
because public funding has decreased, and so they are increasingly
challenged to fund themselves,” says Beverly Barsook, executive
director of the Museum Store Association. “These revenues go
directly to support the institutions, and municipalities also benefit because the museums bring significant tourism and tax dollars.”
The store is on the front lines of the museum’s ability to maintain
itself, and museums are becoming more sophisticated retailers,
basing their strategies on what they think they can sell.
Selling high-priced items is not necessarily a new trend, contends
Barsook. “It depends on the museum’s audience. There are
museums that focus on native crafts in the Southwest and Northwest
that have been selling rugs, jewelry and other Native American
items at prices in the thousands of dollars for many years.”
Still, it may come as a shock to learn that, during a recent show
of the work of glass artist Dale Chihouly at the New York Botanical
Gardens, the store sold over 150 original Chihouly pieces at
prices ranging from $3500 to $7500, according to Ellen Bruzelius,
director of special projects.
EASY ACCESS
What is new, Barsook confirms, is the trend of stores positioning
themselves as destinations independent of the museum itself. For
example, The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMoMA)
shop has a street entrance, allowing walk-in shoppers who may
not be visiting the museum at all. “Our new building was a turning
point for the store,” says Jana Machin, SFMoMA store director.
“It gave us a better platform, with 75 percent more space and
street access. We monitor sales trends versus attendance trends, so
we know that there are a large number of people who come to the
store but not to the museum. Especially during the holidays, we are
a destination.
“Our museum director and our board are very supportive of our
operations,” says Machin, “because some of our board members
come from retail, and they saw the opportunity.”
Although some feel museums are trading on the goodwill and
trustworthiness of the museum as a genteel not-for-profit entity,
“people want to buy in a museum setting,” says Barsook. “They
rely on the reputation of the museum to select good examples of
whatever they are offering for sale.”
THE NEWLY
RENOVATED STORE IN NYC’S ROCKEFELLER CENTER. THE SHOPS CARRY A HUGE ARRAY OF BOOKS, JEWELRY, REPRODUCTIONS (SCULPTURE, TABLETOP, DECORATIVE ITEMS), AND TEXTILES
(SCARVES, SHAWLS, TIES, TOTES, UMBRELLAS), LEATHER GOODS AND CHILDREN’S PRODUCTS, AS WELL AS PRINT REPRODUCTIONS.
CREATING FOR THE AESTHETIC
Kim Baker of Gouda Inc., one of the largest design firms specializing
in the design and development of products for museums, concurs.
“The design process is unique, because the level of sensitivity
is different; curators have to sign off on what’s being done. Some
curators really enjoy being involved and even suggest products …
but it always has to be respectful of the art. Things that are fun
are encouraged, but not things that poke fun. It’s a fine line … one
of the big challenges for museum retail, especially when the location
is away from the art, is how to keep connected to the art. You
always want the public to feel as if they are supporting the institution
by purchasing there, and also to carry that experience of the
museum with their purchases, extending their good feeling about
the museum.”
Gouda designs a huge array of products for a long list of museums;
products include watches, clocks, stuffed animals, beach
towels, scarves, slippers, shawls and, of course, T-shirts, mugs,
tote bags and umbrellas emblazoned with logos and artwork from
museum collections.
But not every museum allows its art to be used on products:
At New York’s Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), there is a longstanding
prohibition against art appearing in any other form than
its original one. “You won’t see any mugs with Van Gogh’s Starry
Night,” says Bonnie Mackay, creative and marketing director for
the MoMA stores.
At The Metropolitan Museum of New York, however, just the
opposite approach prevails. Jody Malordy, general manager of
marketing and publicity, describes the Met’s expanded product
offerings as beyond simple reproductions. “We have designers who
develop jewelry based on a necklace in a painting, for example, or
jewelry and other objects using details of carved furniture in our
collection.” During the museum’s Byzantine exhibition, the shop
offered jewelry selling for up to $60,000.
With the public more educated about the value of sophisticated design,
museums have taken advantage of their reputations as arbiters of taste
to reap the benefits of consumer trust.
MOVING UPSCALE
Although most museum-shop offerings do not approach those
figures, many shops are now carrying more expensive items. For
example, the Denver Art Museum now sells fine jewelry by Colorado-
based designer John Atencio at prices up to $4500, says sales
coordinator Greg McKay.
At the Art Institute of Chicago (AIC), a pair of bronze bookends
modeled after the lions at the building’s entrance go for
$1500. Liz Grainer, vice president of auxiliary operations at AIC,
confirms that “retail contributes a healthy amount to the bottom
line” of the museum. “We are building a whole new wing, adding
260,000 square feet of space, and at least two new shops will be
included,” she reports. The new wing will be completed in summer
2009, and the retail spaces will add to the 7400-sq.-ft. shop in the
main building.
Jewelry, artwork and limited-edition posters are not the only
luxury items at New York’s MoMA: The selection of products
includes actual design icons from MoMA’s collection. You can buy
an Eames lounge chair ($4695) or a Bauhaus table lamp ($850), for
example. The stores also include thousands of products curated
and developed by a staff of six who travel to find and develop products
sold not only at MoMa’s stores but also wholesaled to other
museums and retail outlets, including gift shops.
“Our wholesale operations generate a substantial amount of
business, including the Christmas cards that were the foundation
of the wholesale department,” says Mackay. “We like fun and good
design. Sometimes we find things and ‘MoMA-ize’ them. Our
stores are supermarkets of design … that’s what makes us unique—our originality. We don’t just accept what people give us; we probe
and demand more.”
GROWING FOOTPRINTS
MoMA’s retail spaces in its main building and in the design store
across the street total 11,200 sq. ft., and its remote location (in
Soho) adds another 5300 sq. ft. A new store will open in Tokyo
later this year, says Mackay.
But the behemoth of museum retailing is The Metropolitan
Museum, with 10 permanent remote stores in addition to its main
shop, its Great Hall Luxury Boutique and a newly opened shop in
the Greek and Roman galleries. Additional remote stores travel
with special exhibitions. A second airport shop at JFK will be
open by press time. Jody Malordy, general manager of marketing
and publicity for merchandising activities, says the airport stores
are smaller and therefore more restricted than mall stores, but “we
have something in every category at almost every price point.”
DESIGNED BY KIM BAKER’S GOUDA INC., A LEADING DESIGN FIRM SPECIALIZING
IN PRODUCTS FOR MUSEUM STORES: AN AMERICAN GOTHIC MUG FOR THE ART
INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO
MAKING THE CUT
Most Metropolitan Museum products are developed internally
and are based on objects in the museum’s vast collection or those
of collaborating institutions. Malordy says the Met’s jewelry
designer, Joanne Lyman, has been there for over 30 years. “Every
product is approved by a curator over all stages,” she says, “and
there are some products that don’t pass muster.”
Though their curatorial vetting and selection process may be
more rigorous than that of most retail outlets, there’s no mistaking
that museum shops are participating in a general trend for
more upscale shopping opportunities. With a public that is more
educated about the value of sophisticated design, museums have
taken advantage of their reputations as arbiters of taste to reap
the benefits of consumer trust. Especially in the arena of luxury
goods, museums have profited handsomely from their retail outlets,
wholesaling, online sales and catalogs.
But we all reap a kind of bonus. In their efforts to ensure their
sponsoring institutions’ survival, museum gift shops give us something
in return: the chance to relive our moments in their hallowed
halls and to hold that experience in our hands.
www.nybgshopinthegarden.org
www.sfmoma.org/museumstore/shop_categories.html
www.momastore.org
www.metmuseum.org/store
www.denverartmuseum.org
www.artinstituteshop.org
TOP: A DETAIL FROM THE METROPOLITAN MUSEUM’S MAIN STORE. THE MET HAS 23 STORES (COUNTING THE MUSEUM AND ITS VARIOUS SHOPS AS ONE), INCLUDING A NEW AIRPORT SATELLITE
STORE (THE SECOND AT NYC’S JFK AIRPORT) AND THE STORES THAT ACCOMPANY ITS TRAVELING EXHIBITIONS.