Welcome to society’s latest episode of “The Haves and the Have-Nots.” Today, the gulf is rapidly widening between top-tier museums, theater groups, and orchestras and their less-affluent community peers.
This decade has packed a dangerous cocktail for localized cultural institutions, between a slow pandemic recovery, steep inflation, and labor shortages. Now, many are in peril:
Though not immune to inflation and post-pandemic visitor slumps, brand-name arts organizations feel the strain without the same sense of immediate danger.
Another sign that things aren’t so dire can be found in the corner office — The New York Times identified 29 art bosses, from NYC’s Lincoln Center to LA’s Getty Museum, taking home $500k+ salaries. Those jobs are also often accentuated with housing allowances and first-class travel perks.
Oh, to be a “have”: The director of NYC’s MoMa tops the list with a $2m annual salary — not counting a rent-free apartment above the museum.