The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

IN NYC, FACE MASKS AMID THE ART

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When the iconic T. Rex at the American Museum of Natural History again welcomes visitors, it will gaze down at humans acting a bit differentl­y.

They will still gape up at its massive skeleton, but there will be fewer of them. They’ll stand farther apart and wear masks. Other pandemic precaution­s will include hand sanitizer stations and one-way signs guiding guests through exhibits.

The museum is like many cultural institutio­ns in the city gingerly reopening their doors, weighing the safety of visitors and staff with the need to educate, inspire and support New York’s recovery.

“We have to re-imagine and re-engineer the museum visit,” says museum President Ellen Futter. “We want to fulfill our civic mission. And we think that our mission has never been more important.”

New York City was by far the hardest-hit U.S. city by the pandemic. It’s also home to world-class cultural institutio­ns that have for decades — and city leaders hope will once again — draw millions.

The Museum of Modern Art opens Thursday, and The Metropolit­an Museum of Art reopens its Upper East Side home on Saturday. The American Museum of Natural History plans to reopen to the public Sept. 9.

City museums will institute a range of precaution­s, including reduced hours, reserved tickets, mandating masks, limiting attendance to a quarter of capacity, and closing movie theaters, coat rooms and food courts.

Some of the new rules might make future trips to a museum less spontaneou­s and escapist, but there are some benefits.

“It’s true that it will be less crowded. It also will be more intimate and it may give people a different view of things. I don’t think that will diminish in the least the sense of the visit,” said Futter.

Other institutio­ns need a bit more time. The Guggenheim

will reopen on Oct. 3, while the 9/11 Memorial Museum will reopen on the anniversar­y of the terrorist attacks.

Whether anyone will come is the big question.

“There are a lot of unknowns out there. We don’t know whether people will feel comfortabl­e coming back. We don’t know whether they’ll feel comfortabl­e being with several hundred people indoors, even if we’re a very large space,” said Glenn Lowry, MoMA’s director.

“We ardently believe that people will want to come back to museums and to see the things that are both familiar and unfamiliar — see the things that animate their mind, that make them feel alive.”

Welcoming back visitors is also a chance to end months of lost ticket sales. Each facility has different financial models but for those that rely heavily on attendance, the pandemic has been crippling. The Natural History Museum alone has lost as much as $120 million.

While MoMA is looking at “significan­t losses” for up to three years, it has decided not to charge visitors for the first month. “It just felt like the right gesture,“said Lowry. “I think once you’ve lost a lot of money, losing a little bit more isn’t really the big issue.”

To add to the financial burden, most museums have been forced to pay for safety upgrades, like more staff, touchless bathrooms and costly air filtration systems.

“Every institutio­n is having to look long and hard at their financial model and scale back, postponing and canceling programs and events while simultaneo­usly pushing forward on all fundraisin­g cylinders,” said Regan Grusy, vice president of strategic partnershi­ps at the New Museum.

The pandemic hit only a few months after MoMA reopened in October following a $450 million expansion. Back then, visitors were greeted in the lobby with an enormous Haim Steinbach banner that read: “Hello. Again.” It’s been replaced: Now they’ll see a Milton Glaser piece that reads “I (HEART) NY.”

“This is a moment to assert the resurgence of New York,” said Lowry. “New York has gone from this huge magnet of tourism to being a city that’s just about itself because the tourists aren’t around. So with all of that, we felt this was a more powerful welcome.”

The Metropolit­an Museum of Art was one of the first in the city to close and, with no federal guidance, stepped up to help lead a working group of about 25 museums in the city sharing informatio­n and creating protocols.

“The question we all face is, ‘How long will we have to limit the numbers of visitors?’ If the answer is ‘Five years,’ it would be devastatin­g,” said Met President and CEO Daniel Weiss.

His institutio­n has even taken on COVID-19 with art: The Met sells face masks with floral details from paintings in its collection by Claude Monet and Vincent van Gogh. “We’re trying to make the best of it,” said Weiss.

The Corona neighborho­od in Queens was one the hardest-hit sections of the hardest-hit city. Yet it is home to a museum not built for pandemics — the handson, highly interactiv­e New York Hall of Science.

The Hall prides itself on being a place where children engage with the exhibits — controllin­g mock space rovers, exploring digital environmen­ts and experiment­ing with circuits. It is not willing to change its goals and go touchless or remove exhibition­s. It hopes to reopen next spring.

“We’re not going to back off of our core approach and core methodolog­y,” said Margaret Honey, president and CEO. “We believe that the world will return to doing those kinds of activities when it’s safe to do so. And when it’s safe to do so is really going to depend on vaccines and treatments. And, of course, a willing public.”

Though the doors are closed, the Hall hasn’t been silent. It’s helped donate thousands of meals, turned a parking lot into a drive-in movie theater, encouraged research and hosted a mobile testing site on campus.

Like many museums, it has put many new resources and access to its offerings online, accelerati­ng a prepandemi­c trend.

“This is the time to think about the limitless possibilit­ies when time and space mean something completely different,” said Grusy.

 ?? Associated Press ?? A man walks past a banner by artist Yoko Ono at the Metropolit­an Museum of Art on Aug. 20 in New York.
Associated Press A man walks past a banner by artist Yoko Ono at the Metropolit­an Museum of Art on Aug. 20 in New York.

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