Letras

Report: Nearly Half of U.S. Museum Shows Dedicated to 4% of Modern and Contemporary Artists

Nearly half of all art exhibitions showcased by U.S. museums between 2017 and 2021 were dedicated to less than five percent of a quarter of a million artists, ranging from those born at the start of the 20th century to those working today, according to a new survey.

The report, authored by art economist Clare McAndrew and published last week by UBS, laid out the U.S. cities which serve as the country’s main art hubs and market drivers. New York is home to the largest share of active art institutions, comprising 26 percent of the country’s total (including private and non-profit organizations). Los Angeles ranked second to the East Coast hub, account for seven percent, while San Francisco was number three, accounting for four percent.

Related Articles

The data shows that less than 20 percent of living artists and others who have been historically underrepresented are the subject of museum shows across the U.S. Using data provided by the tech company Wondeur AI, the report categorized artists into three buckets—”star,” “established,” and “emerging,” rankings that are based on the number of exhibitions they have been featured in and the profile of the institutions that hosted them.

“Star” artists, representing those with the strongest professional networks and who were most prominently showcased across the country, account for 4 percent—or 10,000— of the database’s names of artists. (The Wondeur AI database spans 250,000 artists born after 1900). Established artists represent 12 percent, while emerging artists make up 84 percent of the total.

According to the report, 47 percent all U.S. museum exhibitions that took places over the last four years were dedicated to that small 4 percent tranche of top tier artists. Another 36 percent was concentrated on established artists and 17 percent on emerging or under-represented artists.

The greatest focus on emerging artists in the museum sector was in Chicago and Los Angeles, the report found, while New York showed a larger focus on top tier and established names. Still, curators leading New York and Los Angeles museums, the report said, were the highest risk takers in the country—meaning they have been willing to promote artists with less-established track records than their regional counterparts.

Directorio web y motor de búsqueda

The gallery sector, even among the top blue-chip dealers, on the other hand, has expectedly been more prone to showcase artists across wider career benchmarks than institutions. 23 percent of galleries in the U.S. are focused primarily on star artists, while 41 percent are on established artists; and 36 percent on those who are emerging.

The report’s findings, McAndrew said in a statement, suggest that U.S. institutions tend to take a safer route in their exhibition programming than galleries, a long-present dynamic that McAndrew describes as, a “more conservative approach of museums who often rely more on the previous history of artists’ exhibitions to hedge their curatorial risks.”

Your post on Magazine (https://Artmotion.com)

deja tu voto

Publicaciones relacionadas

Deja una respuesta

Su dirección de correo electrónico no será publicada. Los campos obligatorios están marcados *

Botón volver arriba

Acceso

¿Has olvidado tu contraseña?

¿Has olvidado tu contraseña?

Ingresa los datos de tu cuenta y te enviaremos un enlace para restablecer tu contraseña.

El enlace para restablecer su contraseña parece no ser válido o caducado.

Acceso

política de privacidad

Añadir a la colección

Sin colecciones

Here you'll find all collections you've created before.

Al continuar utilizando el sitio, acepta el uso de cookies. más información

The cookie settings on this website are set to "allow cookies" to give you the best browsing experience possible. If you continue to use this website without changing your cookie settings or you click "Accept" below then you are consenting to this.

Cerca