Los Angeles Times

LACMA raises admission price

- By Deborah Vankin deborah.vankin @latimes.com

The museum will charge L.A. County adults $20 and out-of-towners $25.

The cost of general admission to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art is going up. Or down. Depending on how you look at it.

The museum has, over the last seven years, charged $15 for adult general admission and $25 for special exhibition admission (which includes entrance to the rest of the museum). Starting Thursday, LACMA will charge Los Angeles County adult residents $20 for general admission and will include special exhibition­s in that price. The fee will be $25 for visitors who live outside of L.A. County.

“I’ve never liked the extra price for special exhibition­s. We put some of the biggest efforts into the ticketed exhibition­s, and ironically, they’re the ones that are the most inaccessib­le, price wise,” LACMA Director Michael Govan said in an interview, citing the current special exhibition “Chagall: Fantasies for the Stage.” “Attendance will shoot up for ‘Chagall’ as soon as we change it because a lot of people just don’t pay the extra for the special shows.”

The new pricing structure, Govan said, “makes it much more accessible and simplifies the explanatio­n of what’s on view. And the way we’re going to compensate for that is charge a higher [general admission] price for tourists. The idea is to give more benefit to the taxpayers and charge a little bit more for tourists — and it should all even out.”

About 20% of LACMA’s audience is tourists, Govan said. A different pricing structure for out-of-towners is not uncommon. At the Art Institute of Chicago, general admission is $20 for Chicago residents, $22 for Illinois residents and $25 for everyone else.

The new general admission prices at LACMA are in line with other major museums such as the Metropolit­an Museum of Art in New York ($25) and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art ($25) but higher than some other L.A. institutio­ns. The Hammer Museum, which had charged $10, instituted free admission in 2014. The Museum of Contempora­ry Art charges $15 general admission. Admission to the Getty is free (though parking is $15 for most visitors).

Like many museums, LACMA will continue a tiered system: In-county seniors and students will pay $16 (an increase from $10), for instance. The museum said it has programs allowing free entry, such as its NexGen program, where children under 17 attend for free with a guardian, and Free After Three, in which L.A. County residents get free general admission after 3 p.m. on weeknights.

“Last year we had 1.5 million visitors to LACMA, and 750,000 of those people didn’t pay admission,” said Govan, who included in that tally visitors who paid for museum membership.

LACMA will continue to charge an additional fee for exhibition­s that the museum is calling Timed-Entry Experience­s. Past examples include James Turrell’s Perceptual Cell “Light Reignfall” or the interactiv­e “Rain Room” exhibition. TimedEntry Experience­s often have limited capacity and are priced differentl­y. Adult nonmember admission to “Rain Room” was $30; for “Light Reignfall” it was $35.

Ticket revenue constitute­s a small portion of LACMA’s budget.

“Most years it’s about 10%,” Govan said. “In the past it has ranged, depending on what the special exhibition­s were. But the average contributi­on these days to the operating budget is about 10%.”

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