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    If I started following you and you wonder why, I also run the yetanother365.tumblr.com blog, or, I stumbled upon you and just liked you.

    45 Year Old Canadian Mom of three (23, 21 & 18), Senior Technology Specialist with the phone company. Hobby photographer but with a budding Child Photography business.

    Created a blog in a fake name to have a private place to vent but, over time, I've linked to too much that's real about me.


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    Audrey is Jill from Calgary. Nice to meet you.

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    • 60 notes
    • 2 months ago
    nparts:

Make Museums Free: What we can learn from Britain and WashingtonAfter two or three centuries in business, public museums have developed into one of the splendours of democracy, the only places where private taste meets elite scholarship and we all pursue our own passions at our own pace. It’s an arena of opinion that permits individualism and innovation to come magnificently alive.Just one thing is wrong: Going to a museum in Canada costs money. Unlike parks, libraries and cathedrals, museums have box offices. If two adults take three teenagers to the National Gallery in Ottawa, they pay $18. That’s to enter a building that their taxes built, to see art that they, being citizens, own. The Vancouver Art Gallery, which charges $17.50 for an individual ticket, offers a family rate (maximum two adults and four children) for $50, plus tax. Paddy Johnson, a Canadian curator who runs an art blog from Brooklyn, recently wrote: “I’ve never thought the public should be charged to see their own belongings.”That’s also the British view. In Britain most of the national museums are entirely free, most of the time. In Washington the array of museums run by the Smithsonian Institution on the Mall proudly advertises “admission always free.”Unfortunately, while charging money at the door supports the running of a museum, it also strengthens the wretched idea that the arts and sciences are the business of a few specialists and the well-to-do. Although many museums have free days or free hours, the existence of a regular ticket price sets the tone. It especially discourages those who find museums a shade intimidating.

I am 45 years old.   Born 1966. Military Brat.  In the mid 70’s to mid 80’s I grew up in the Ottawa area.
Back then… museums WERE free.  As a kid, I spent every spare moment that I had was spent in a museum (and Ottawa had many great ones).  It makes me sad that my kids were not able to do this - they have missed out on a great part of growing up.

    nparts:

    Make Museums Free: What we can learn from Britain and Washington
    After two or three centuries in business, public museums have developed into one of the splendours of democracy, the only places where private taste meets elite scholarship and we all pursue our own passions at our own pace. It’s an arena of opinion that permits individualism and innovation to come magnificently alive.

    Just one thing is wrong: Going to a museum in Canada costs money. Unlike parks, libraries and cathedrals, museums have box offices. If two adults take three teenagers to the National Gallery in Ottawa, they pay $18. That’s to enter a building that their taxes built, to see art that they, being citizens, own. The Vancouver Art Gallery, which charges $17.50 for an individual ticket, offers a family rate (maximum two adults and four children) for $50, plus tax. Paddy Johnson, a Canadian curator who runs an art blog from Brooklyn, recently wrote: “I’ve never thought the public should be charged to see their own belongings.”

    That’s also the British view. In Britain most of the national museums are entirely free, most of the time. In Washington the array of museums run by the Smithsonian Institution on the Mall proudly advertises “admission always free.”

    Unfortunately, while charging money at the door supports the running of a museum, it also strengthens the wretched idea that the arts and sciences are the business of a few specialists and the well-to-do. Although many museums have free days or free hours, the existence of a regular ticket price sets the tone. It especially discourages those who find museums a shade intimidating.

    I am 45 years old.   Born 1966. Military Brat.  In the mid 70’s to mid 80’s I grew up in the Ottawa area.

    Back then… museums WERE free.  As a kid, I spent every spare moment that I had was spent in a museum (and Ottawa had many great ones).  It makes me sad that my kids were not able to do this - they have missed out on a great part of growing up.

    (via nationalpost)

    1. lewesde reblogged this from nationalpost
    2. wallsandbridges reblogged this from nparts
    3. museumsandthings reblogged this from museumuse
    4. realcleverscience liked this
    5. ghostofthewind liked this
    6. sonhe reblogged this from shuraiya
    7. thepetitemuse liked this
    8. shuraiya reblogged this from museumuse and added:
      ugh god all of this i agree so hard it hurts
    9. shuraiya liked this
    10. ev-love liked this
    11. oh-theplacesyoullgo liked this
    12. srsly-reyes liked this
    13. caststone liked this
    14. museumuse reblogged this from jgorehampenney
    15. preservationva reblogged this from jgorehampenney and added:
      Interesting article! Finding the balance between open access and being able to support and protect a collection is a...
    16. quadrillion reblogged this from nationalpost and added:
      »Love me some museums!
    17. jgorehampenney reblogged this from nationalpost and added:
      I loved that the big national institutions in England didn’t charge an admission fee. I hope that some day, people can...
    18. rampantnarcissism reblogged this from nationalpost
    19. nicoledeezy reblogged this from nationalpost
    20. sapiosexualcoquette reblogged this from nationalpost
    21. theblankettheory liked this
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    23. itsaspaceromance reblogged this from apiphile and added:
      The problem with free national museums is what it does to the budgets of smaller museums - on the one hand, huge chunks...
    24. mustur liked this
    25. moooochelle reblogged this from nationalpost
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    28. apiphile reblogged this from whateverlizzie and added:
      worth pointing out that thanks to the tories there’s a good chance we’ll end up having to pay for museums and art...
    29. whateverlizzie reblogged this from mozaria and added:
      The thing with museums is that what you’re being charged is generally about a tenth of what you, individually, are...
    30. canadianclassics reblogged this from insularcortex
    31. carolynlives reblogged this from nationalpost
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    36. emdrazuli reblogged this from nationalpost
    37. mozaria reblogged this from nationalpost and added:
      ALL OF THIS. Ugh. I wish our government did something about it. The only museum I had to pay for in London was the...
    38. ryanmichael-s liked this
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