Reinventing Museum Offerings During COVID
By Dan Radmacher
The West Virginia Mine Wars Museum was preparing for a big year in 2020. The centennial of the Battle of Matewan was coming up in May and the museum had just moved into a larger space that was in the middle of renovations when Gov. Jim Justice declared a statewide emergency due to the COVID pandemic on March 16.
The order closed restaurants, bars and casinos, but within days, Justice advised residents to stay home as much as possible. A week after the emergency declaration, he ordered all nonessential businesses closed.
“It became very clear that all in-person activities just wouldn’t happen,” says Museum Director Mackenzie New-Walker. “Travel was limited. People were on mandatory quarantines. It wasn’t safe for construction crews. We realized we couldn’t finish the rebuild by May. The museum was in a very weird position.”
That was true for museums across the region, even those not in the middle of construction.
In Blowing Rock, North Carolina, the Blowing Rock Art and History Museum had just gotten pieces in from artists all over the state for an exhibit slated to open March 21 featuring works crafted from wood. Then the state issued a stay-at-home order and closed all nonessential businesses.
“Everything came to a screeching halt,” says BRAHM Program & Outreach Director Willard Watson III.
BRAHM had seen its biggest year for attendance and fundraising in 2019 and was looking for 2020 to be even better. Instead, the museum had to cancel lectures, concerts and workshops — more than 100 events, eventually.
“We realized we had to do something,” says Watson. “Life stresses make art even more important.”
Like the staff at many museums, BRAHM staff members quickly realized that going online would be key.
“We totally redesigned the website,” says Watson. “Every day of the week, we had content: Behind-the-scenes, virtual tours, art lessons. We interviewed artists and produced content for a YouTube page.”
According to Watson, the museum went from not having a presence on YouTube at all to producing 90 videos that have received more than 16,000 views.
Videos also proved key for Center in the Square, a nonprofit organization dedicated to helping revitalize downtown Roanoke, Virginia. The organization runs several of its own museums — including a pinball museum and a children’s museum — and provides space and support to several others.
“Like everybody else, we stepped away thinking we’d be back really soon and it would all move quickly,” says April Corbett, director of marketing and outreach for the center. “I don’t think anyone understood the longevity of the situation when we got into it. But we knew quickly we were going to have to figure out a way to engage our audience.”
She started recording short videos. Local television personality John Carlin did several videos discussing the various fish in the lobby aquariums. Curriculum Director Amanda Wright hosted videos showing off the center’s green rooftop and solar panels.
Corbett also did a weekly craft night on Facebook Live. “It was fun to do,” she says. “We were trying to engage kids and parents and help them understand that they could use materials on hand to do these projects — continual learning out of your recycling bin.”
Center in the Square was able to reopen some of its museums in July at a far reduced capacity, but with schools planning virtual or hybrid openings, Corbett knew field trips — which provide a lot of the center’s operating revenue — wouldn’t be happening.
But schools also had needs. Corbett was contacted by Patricia Gadreau, administrator of science curriculum for Montgomery County Public Schools, asking whether the center could develop videos that would help students with a new Standards of Learning curriculum.
This question led to the development of virtual “Get Schooled” field trips that the center produced in partnership with other nonprofit organizations. One of the first was with Mill Mountain Zoo, centered on the importance of habitat and adaptation for threatened and endangered species.
In addition to longer videos, the virtual field trips also include “passports” — downloadable or printed assignments to help engage students in the content and provide a grading mechanism for schools that wanted that.
“The Mill Mountain Zoo field trip caught the attention of local school systems — and PBS,” says Corbett. Blue Ridge PBS offered a partnership to develop more content for a local educational channel for children.
“Sometimes when we’re put in a situation that stresses and strains us and pushes us to the limit, we can either sit down and cry or whine about it — or get up and do something,” says Corbett. “The community as a whole got up and did something. That kind of energy is so enticing. It can help regenerate your spirit and soul. That’s what we need at this point.”
The Mine Wars Museum also began developing educational videos, including a mine wars forum that interviewed actors, artists, authors and others about their work related to West Virginia’s coal history.
Chuck Keeney, historian and founding board member of the museum, conducted the interviews online. Chris Cooper — who portrayed union organizer Joe Kenehan in the John Sayles movie “Matewan” — joined him for an interview, as did singer songwriter Steve Earle, who wrote the soundtrack for Coal Country, a Broadway play about the Upper Big Branch mining disaster.
For the 100th anniversary of the Battle of Matewan, the museum put together a 10-minute, unscripted walking tour of the town. “We put it on Facebook and were able to reach thousands of people,” New-Walker says. “We were starting to think about how to do our programs virtually.”
Not all adaptations to the lockdown by museums involved virtual offerings. BRAHM got a grant from the Kennedy-Herterich Foundation to produce art lesson kits to send to all kindergarten through second-grade students in Watauga County, N.C. A second grant for this year expanded funding to cover students through the fourth grade.
“These are all lessons that can be done offline,” Watson says. “There’s something to be said for disconnecting, turning off screens and giving families a chance to do something relaxing together. The kids were very excited to get these kits. Not everyone has access to art supplies.”
BRAHM produced an online exhibit of art created by the students.
The International Civil Rights Center & Museum in downtown Greensboro, N.C., was scheduled to host a traveling exhibit about “The Negro Motorist Green Book,” an important resource that helped Black people plan travel in the South during the Jim Crow era, from March 3 through April 22. After the lockdown was imposed, they moved it to the building’s large window fronts.
Later, another exhibit about Martin Luther King Jr.’s March on Washington was also set up in the windows. “It was a way for the public to continue to come by and be engaged when they couldn’t be in the museum,” says John Swaine, CEO of the civil rights museum. “I liked that people would stop and read the exhibits, which were text-heavy.”
ICRCM also produced a series of virtual offerings, offered for purchase on the website. Those will remain even as pandemic restrictions continue to ease.
“It’s going to be very important going forward,” Swaine says. “The International Civil Rights Center & Museum connects with people all over the globe. When we decided we needed to conduct our annual fundraising gala online, it opened up additional possibilities.”
During the gala, the organization’s 2021 Trailblazer award went to Loujain Al-Hathloul, a Saudi Arabian fighting for women’s rights.
The ability to expand reach and exposure has also been a silver lining in the pandemic cloud for the Asheville Art Museum, according to Kristi McMillan, director of learning and engagement.
“We’ve discovered that we can do distance learning,” McMillan says. “Universities have been taking advantage of that for years, but it is not something that museums have incorporated into their educational offerings. We have members now in Montana and England — places we never would have thought of — because people were engaging with us virtually.”
Foundation grants and government assistance have been key to survival for many museums. Nonprofit organizations were eligible for Paycheck Protection Program funding passed as part of the first COVID relief package.
“That took a little stress off,” Swaine says. “By the time we qualified for PPP resources, I knew that was an opportunity to do things that in the first 10 years of operations we didn’t have the opportunity to do. We cleaned the museum from top to bottom. We repainted. We refreshed exhibits.”
The Mine Wars Museum received a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities to digitize its entire collection. “We were able to hire someone to expertly photograph all our artifacts on exhibit and in our archives,” New-Walker says. “The board had talked about doing that for years, but not being open to the public gave us time to do it.”
BRAHM officials had also talked about making online offerings available for a long time, according to Watson.
“We would have people ask us if we recorded lessons or lectures,” Watson says. “We never had the staff to do it. With COVID, we didn’t have an option not to do it. We had two options: do nothing and just kind of panic or channel that anxiety into productivity.”
That productivity has raised BRAHM’s profile and reach. “We increased our presence in the community and around the world,” Watson says. “We’re able to track who our viewers are — and they’re from all around the world. Some of our art lessons have 1,000 views. We did a large series of programs for Black History Month and we saw those lessons take off because our instructor saw gaps and we were able to fill them.”
As millions of vaccine doses are being administered and hope of finally returning to normal wrestles with concerns about a potential fourth surge, museums are looking to a future that, normal or not, will definitely be different than before COVID.
“People would revolt if we didn’t keep the virtual offerings going,” McMillan says. “We’ve come to like it as well. We have now found a way to continue to engage with people from near and far.”
The Mine Wars Museum’s increased online presence will help keep people engaged even when the museum is closed over the winter months, according to New-Walker. “It gave us opportunities to do things we wouldn’t have considered before,” she says.
For now, the museum is working on plans to mark the Battle of Blair Mountain centennial in late August and early September.
“We’ve had to move the organizing work online,” says New-Walker. “That’s had its challenges — bandwidth issues in southern West Virginia particularly. There’ve been generational challenges, too. People involved in historic preservation tend to be older. They had to learn new tools and technologies. And we had to learn to meet people where they are, which might mean using email, direct mail or a phone call instead of a Zoom meeting.”
Currently, organizers are planning all of the events to be in person, according to New-Walker. They’ve set a June 1 deadline to determine whether that will be safe.
“It may be that it might not be safe for a large, indoor concert, but it will probably be safe enough for an outdoor walking tour,” says New-Walker. “We’re hoping for a hybrid mix of in-person and virtual events at worst and a full in-person event schedule at best.”
Original plans were for about 15 events, but as more organizations — including unions, humanities organizations and other museums — have gotten involved, the number has grown.
“Right now, we have 25 events, programs or exhibits that are lined up to help mark this monumental milestone in labor history,” says New-Walker. “I’m thrilled that we have all these different folks coming together to share in this vision to commemorate the Battle of Blair, memorialize the men, women and children who were killed and celebrate the spirit of Blair Mountain that is with us today. I’m confident that we’ll be able to have this incredible event series over Labor Day weekend.”
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