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    Museum workers, identity politics and class

    The Mellon Foundation recently released its Art Museum Staff Demographic Survey 2022. It is consumed with questions of race and gender, the obsession of the upper middle class.

    The Mellon is the 28th wealthiest charitable foundation in the world, with an endowment of $6.2 billion. Its ultimate source lies in the riches accumulated by banker and industrialist Andrew Mellon (1855-1937), one of America’s robber barons and Secretary of the Treasury at the time of the 1929 Wall Street Crash. Like others of its type, the foundation, in the final analysis, pursues issues and funds projects aligned with the interests of the US corporate establishment.

    The Mellon’s current president, Elizabeth Alexander, in her foreword to the survey, argues that given “their unique role in our society, art museums must reflect the demographics of our richly diverse country.”

    Alexander takes it for granted and assumes her readers will too that “demographics” simply refers to race and gender. In fact, the vast majority of the American population depend on a wage, and thereby belong to the working class. 

    ‘Intellectual Leadership Positions’ since 2015, POC and white (Mellon Foundation)

    Moreover, tens of thousands of those workers are employed by museums and other cultural institutions.

    Museum workers have experienced a nightmarish few years since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in early 2020. Job and income loss has been enormous. Many have left the profession. Those remaining face high levels of financial and psychological insecurity, with institutions everywhere attempting to place as much as possible of the burden of their economic difficulties on the workers’ backs. On top of everything else, inflation is now eating up wages.

    According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), employment at “museums, historical sites, and similar institutions” stood at 174,300 in December 2019.

    The conditions produced by the pandemic, above all, the temporary closure of many institutions, led to a sharp drop in that figure, to 125,600 in April 2020 (from 172,200 the month before) and to 121,300 by July of that year. From the previous December’s high point, the July 2020 numbers represented a loss of 53,000 jobs, or 30 percent of the workforce. By November 2022, the BLS calculates that employment has climbed back to 164,600 (the equivalent of 2017 levels), still a 6 percent decline from three years earlier, or 9,700 jobs.

    In March 2021, the American Alliance of Museums (AAM) made public their findings as to the “Impact of COVID-19 on People in the Museum Field.” The AAM estimated that 43 percent of museum workers as a whole saw their income fall by an average of 31 percent over the course of 2020, or $21,191 per worker. Some 13 percent were living paycheck to paycheck.

    More than 60 percent of part-time staff, already living at poverty levels, testified to “having lost income due to the pandemic, with a median of $8,000 lost due to reduced salary, benefits, or hours for a median reduction of 50 percent.” Independent contractors had also been hard hit—78 percent of individuals in that category lost income in 2020, according to the AAM study, “at a median of $25,000 dollars, the equivalent of about 50 percent of pre-pandemic income.”

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