I  love small museums. I love looking at old objects on display in  sparsely populated galleries, where I don’t have to for the best viewing  angle. I love engaging the front-desk volunteer in an extended  conversation, getting lost amid the sometimes randomly assembled  artifacts, and seeing “the fingerprints” of the institution’s staff and  volunteers all over the exhibitions. A visit to a small museum can be an  indescribably rich experience.
In  the post-Sept. 11 environment, many museum-goers, seeking alternatives  to the larger tourist-magnets, have joined me in rediscovering the charm  and beauty of small museums. Why go afar—and endure the jitters of high  security air travel—when there are interesting, unexplored museums,  suitable for a family outing, just a car ride away.
In  the post-Sept. 11 world, blockbuster exhibitions at big museums just  don’t have the luster they once did. Exhibitions of Old Masters, hidden  treasures, and artifacts from sunken ships seem repetitive and trite,  the promise often not living up to the billing. For many museum  visitors, the hefty ticket prices, long lines, and omnipresent security  guards at those big shows make for a less than satisfactory experience.
At  the small museum, there are no inflated expectations, no pretensions,  and no awful waits. The exhibitions—exploring local themes, featuring  the work of local artists—may be small and somewhat idiosyncratic, but  they mirror the small, idiosyncratic world we know, close to home. These  exhibitions have meaning and interest, even without the boost of the  marketeer’s branding. 
In  recent years, many larger institutions, examining their relevance to a  rapidly changing world, also have begun to look to smaller museums for  examples of how to listen better to community constituents and engage  them in the vital work of the institution. This is a happy trend. For  years, small museums have been unfairly criticized for lack of  professionalism and ignored by their peers—the opinion-shapers at  larger, better-heeled institutions. “Operating a small museum is  [different than] operating a big museum,” says  Steve Olsen, assistant director at the Museum of Church History and  Art, Salt Lake City. “There are qualitatively different approaches.  There are remarkable innovations from small museums that large museums  would do well to take heed of.”
According  to Olsen, who is also an active member of the Western Museums  Association, 75 percent of U.S. museums are small institutions with  budgets under $250,000, usually staffed by volunteers or a couple of  paid employees. “If you added up all the collections in the country,  numerically, most of the artifacts would be found in small museums,” he  says. “If we don’t help the small museums, we’re literally risking the  fabric of our own heritage.”
The  exact number of small museums is unknown; the count varies according to  the source. There isn’t even agreement on what constitutes “small.”  According to the AAM Small Museum Administrators Committee (SMAC), a  small museum has a budget of less than $350,000. However, the federal  Institute of Museum and Library Services sets the cut-off point at  $250,000. Based on its own definition of what a museum is, AAM estimates  that there are more than 8,200 museums in the country, a majority of  which can be considered small. 
In  the opinion of Roger Lidman, director of the Pueblo Grande Museum in  Phoenix, “AAM is not on small museums’ radar, and they are not on AAM’s  radar.” He argues that there are nearly 16,000 museums in the country,  most of which are small, far more than AAM accounts for. He bases this  figure on a 1997 survey of state museum associations (summarized in a  report that he co-authored called Are Museums Ready for the Year 2000, published by the Museum Association of Arizona).
Whatever  the precise figure, it is clear that small museums are a significant  force and help anchor the cultural life of communities across the  country.
As  a young boy, growing up in Seattle in the 1960s, I never had the  opportunity to visit a museum. The schools never took us on museum field  trips; my immigrant parents never did either. My first museum-going  experience—in my teens—was to a tiny place: the Memory Lane Museum at  the Seattle Goodwill store. While my parents picked through the  second-hand goods, I roamed off to a back section, designated as a free  museum. There, visitors could feast their eyes on hundreds of salvaged  antiques, collectibles, and knick-knacks, crammed inside about a dozen  large display cases, constructed with old windows from Seattle  buildings. I moved among the cases for what seemed like several hours,  spellbound, looking at old typewriters, model houses, baseball mitts,  vacuum cleaners, suitcases, pennants, faded black-and-white photos,  kitchen tins, model trucks, baskets, and toy robots. 
The  smell of the store—the odor of a musty attic, mingled with the smell of  popcorn (there was a popcorn stand in the front of the store)—provided  what we now, in museum lingo, would term a “multi-sensory experience.”  The absence of explanatory label text diminished the bounty of the  experience, but I couldn’t complain: admission was free. My mother had  to shout loudly and repeatedly at me to get me to leave.
The  visits to the Memory Lane Museum were, for me, the first opportunity to  experience the special lure and awe of artifacts arranged for viewing  pleasure in a museum. My youthful curiosity about what lay beyond the  walls of my rather insular world—as well as my passion for small  museums—was kindled forever in the modest setting. Over the years, I’ve  visited dozens of little community museums, historical societies,  college galleries, and public libraries, where I came to understand the  particular skill and devotion of individuals who—without the lure of  money—have made careers out of exhibition-making and caring for precious  artifacts and documents.
Ten  years ago, I became director of the Wing Luke Asian Museum, a small  community-based institution rooted in a historically Asian-American  neighborhood of Seattle. At that time the museum had three staff members  and a budget of $150,000. Like the directors of other small  institutions, I wore many hats. In addition to the usual managerial  responsibilities of all museum directors, I also had the duties of the  “small museum” director: I climbed a rickety ladder to change light  bulbs, ran to the bathroom to unplug overflowing toilets, wrote label  text minutes before the exhibition opening, led school tours, and  sometimes staffed the front admission desk. Yes, I had the opportunity  to taste, firsthand, the adrenaline-filled joys and agonies of working  inside a small museum. 
The  Wing Luke is growing, and my responsibilities as director are evolving  into new areas. But many other small museums have stayed the same size.  It’s often not a bad choice. “Most small museums don’t want to be big  museums,” says Janice Klein, director of the Mitchell Museum of the  American Indian, a Chicago museum with significant Native American  collections. Her institution, connected to a small college, has a budget  of $150,000 and two staff members. “My current fear is that if we  become better known—if we double or triple our visitorship—we’re in  trouble,” she says. “The experience for visitors would be miserable.”
Klein  also serves as the chair of SMAC. Like Olsen, she points out that small  museums care for “irreplaceable” collections and adds that professional  standards should be established for small museums that recognize the  universe in which they operate. “Don’t make accreditation beyond the  reach of the small museum,” says Klein. “You don’t want to give [me]  pages and pages of ‘You have to do this.’ I might respond, ‘Yes, and I  have to pay the electricity bill today, too. Do I want electricity or  accreditation?’”
Most  small museums run on such a tight shoestring that survival is a  hand-to-mouth endeavor. Keeping regular public hours is a high hurdle.  Many don’t have computers, much less e-mail or voice mail. Everyone does  a little bit of everything, learning not from manuals but by looking  over the shoulders of those who preceded them. Small museum staff don’t  have time to dabble in the theoretical or the sublime. Just getting the  job done is enough. Making time to travel to museum conferences for  professional training, let alone visiting other small museums in the  same region, is an unimaginable luxury.
Like  Klein, Steve Anderson, supervisor of the Renton Historical Museum,  Renton, Wash., a 5,000-square-foot museum in a former fire station, is  part of a two-member staff. “It takes a schizoid person to do this kind  of thing,” he says. “Here, you’re doing the policy stuff and the  programming and the fund raising, but you’re also cleaning the toilets.  And you’re trying to look several years down the road as well.”
Anderson,  who has headed the museum for the past eight years, recently took over  yet another responsibility—an additional job, really—as curator of  collections, stepping in after the previous curator succumbed to a  stroke. “How we often lose our staff at small museums is by death,  stroke, and mental incapacitation,” he says. Another challenge is  educating board members on how museums operate. Says Anderson: “I had  one board member say to me, ‘Well, why don’t you accession all the items  now? Then we’ll sort it out later and deaccession the stuff we don’t  want.’ She didn’t realize the enormous amount of work that would  involve.”
At  the tiny (1,400 square feet with a budget under $100,000) Novato  History Museum in California, Director Greta Brunschwyler struggles with  similar board education issues. “Some of the older people, especially  those who are collectors themselves, just don’t understand that we can’t  keep everything,” she says. Her museum, which served as the home of the  city’s first postmaster, once squeezed all its artifacts, related to  the region’s agricultural and military history, on its walls. “I took  one item down, a day at a time,” she says. “And believe it or not, board  members actually thought there were more things on display because they  could finally see what was on the walls.”
Like  many small museum directors, Brunschwyler divides her professional  career between two places: she works part-time at the museum and  part-time as cultural arts supervisor for the city of Novato. She keeps  the museum running with another part-time staff person and “30 really,  really dedicated volunteers. . . . I’m happy if I’m making a little  progress,” she says. “I have to remind myself from time to time that the  collections will be there tomorrow.”
The  Novato History Museum was founded in 1976, during the bicentennial  fever that swept into the small towns of the United States. Like many of  the small museums created in that period, Novato is grappling with life  in the “post-founder” era. Brunschwyler is the second director in the  life of the institution. “The founders did things their way,” she says.  “Now we have to go in and keep the strong community roots, yet look at  creating some standards and procedures. Last year, we did a complete  inventory. Now we’re working on deaccessioning. Slowly, with some board  turnover, people realize there are fund-raising responsibilities—that  it’s not just a social club.”
While  life at the small museum for those who work there every day is far from  being a bed of roses, staff remain because the joys still outweigh the  frustrations. They appreciate the closeness to visitors and community.  The freedom from bureaucracy. Incredibly supportive volunteers. The  flexibility to try out new ideas. The ability to, as one small museum  director wryly put it, “actually see an idea come to fruition in your  lifetime.”
Says  Rebecca Snetselaar, interim director of the Mendocino County Museum,  Willits, Calif.: “One of the rewards is that we get to be generalists.  The whole staff gets involved in the full range of museum work. One of  the best things that ever happened to me was visiting a much, much  larger museum. Their budget was larger, but their problems were larger.”
At  the Mendocino County Museum, which has an operating budget of $239,000,  volunteers eagerly step forward in times of need. “If, for example, we  have conservation needs,” says Snetselaar, “I know I could get on the  phone and call someone to help out.” Brunschwyler puts it another way:  “[In] a small museum, the volunteers know that if they don’t do it, it  really won’t get done.”
At  small museums “staff members treat the visitors almost more like  friends,” says Janice Klein. “You get a much stronger sense of immediacy  and why you’re doing it. At a big museum, you can arrive in the  morning, take an elevator upstairs to your office . . . and take an  elevator down at the end of the day and leave without making contact  with visitors.”
At  small museums, the development of a changing exhibition is an  improvisational joy ride, fraught with nervous twists and turns. You’re  never quite sure where you’ll land, never quite sure what you’ll finally  assemble for display. Staff and volunteers dash through the research  process, artifact gathering, writing, design, and fabrication, not  necessarily in that sequence. Unlike larger museums, where the process  is usually tidier, volunteers at small museums may emerge at any stage  in the exhibition-making process—usually enriching the project,  sometimes destabilizing it. Small museums rely on every low-cost,  low-tech shortcut in the book, including reuse of panels, materials, and  stock artifacts.
Occasionally,  small museums will go all out and develop one ambitious signature  exhibition. Last September, the Renton Historical Museum created  “Century to Century,” an exhibition that marked the city’s 100-year  history, decade-by-decade. Using the donated construction skills of  retired Boeing employees, Steve Anderson was able to complete a $100,000  project using just $28,000. Centennial projects are a great way for  small museums to “raise themselves up” and attract new audiences, but  they also can be a source of great stress, Anderson says. “I was the  designer, installer, curator, and painter. Over 250 people came to the  opening, including the mayor. We made the city look great, but it killed  us. I was exhausted.”
After  the centennial opening, “we had people bringing incredible stuff out of  their closets,” says Anderson. “But here I’ve already got 6,000 objects  staring me in the face, saying, ‘Do me first.’ You’re trying to hold  back the tide, but here’s all these little driblets.”
Describing  the panicked frenzy of completing an exhibition, Klein says, “Half of  my brain is working on public relations and the other half is working on  creating the exhibition. I’m asking people to come to the museum, and  yet I don’t have a clue whether there will be anything to see. Some  people say, ‘Well, you could outsource it or get a consultant.’ That’s  when you know they are speaking a different language.”
The  Berman Museum of Art, Ursinus College, Pa., hosts 12 exhibitions a  year. The offerings are closely linked to the curricula of instructors  in specific departments of the school. “If there’s label copy, I’m  lucky,” says Director and Curator Lisa Hanover. “For some exhibitions,  we literally have just the identifying information and maybe a brochure  with a few paragraphs of text. Unless we’re doing a tour, the viewing  audience is left to do their own interpretation.” Hanover, who has been  at the Berman Museum for 14 years, acknowledges that the institution  “could do a better job of interpretation.” But with only three staff  members, it’s hard. “It would be very refreshing to take a sabbatical,”  she adds, which would provide an opportunity to focus on in-depth  research.
Jacquiline  Touba, executive director of the World Awareness Children’s Museum,  Glens Falls, N.Y., operates out of 4,200 square feet on the third floor  of an old YMCA building. She and others who work at children’s museums  face the special challenge of maximizing the interactive appeal of  displays for young audiences. This isn’t easy, given the $120,000  budget. The museum’s exhibition designer does all the research, creates  the displays, and also serves as the educator, says Touba: “We stretch  our dollars like you can’t believe. If we didn’t have so many voluntary  services, we couldn’t manage. Unfortunately, one effect of Sept. 11 is  that we’re not receiving anything from the state legislature, most  probably for the next two years, because all the monies are being  directed to New York City.”
Since  Sept. 11, small museums, especially those that have thrived on strong  grassroots ties, have become natural focal points for community groups  struggling with issues of cross-cultural tolerance and seeking healing  and reflection. Many have hosted soul-searching dialogues on recent  events. For example, at the innovative Pratt Museum in Homer, Alaska, a  series of monthly community conversations is part of a long-range  strategy to develop topical, story-centered changing exhibitions in the  institution’s galleries.
Betsy  Webb, curator of collections and project manager for the Pratt’s master  exhibition plan, says the first conversation, attended by 62  individuals out of a community of 4,200, focused on the local issue of  vandalism. “This summer and fall, a lot of vandalism has been directed  at public installations of art,” she said. “One idea is to do an exhibit  on graffiti. We would exhibit objects in the gallery and put up scratch  board and let the visitors interpret it.”
When  Webb first arrived at the Pratt 10 years ago, she was surprised that  visitors, especially kids, would “scratch out and correct label  captions” in the 3,950-square-foot gallery. But she realizes now that  “this demonstrates the high level of comfort that the community has with  the institution.”
The  Ak-Chin Him-Dak Museum and Archives in Arizona also has created  meaningful programs by linking its work to the most pressing needs of  its community, a Native American tribe on a reservation in a desert  region 40 miles south of Phoenix. The 650-member tribe opened its  8,000-square-foot museum in 1991 as a voice and platform for community  issues, not as a magnet for tourists. It operates as a department of the  tribal government.
Recently,  the Ak-Chin Museum created an exhibition on diabetes, an illness that  affects many Ak-Chin tribal members. The display unfolded in two phases.  In 2000, the focus was on the disease itself; in 2001, it was on  prevention. “We did interviews with tribal members, with pictures and  quotes underneath, to show people, especially our young people, that  diabetes was something that was affecting people they knew,” says Elaine  Peters, the museum’s director. “If you’ve lived here long enough, and  this is my home, you become aware of what the community needs are, and  you try to provide a direct voice for them.”
In  this way, as a voice for their niche audiences and as a connecting  point between generations, small museums reap their greatest triumphs.  In rural towns, in inner city neighborhoods, on tribal lands, at  colleges, in parks, these institutions empower their residents, reshape  cultural understanding, and challenge us to look at ourselves in new  ways. Small museums affirm the value and character of their communities.  Their work has been done quietly, steadily, and honorably for many  years.
How  can the field-at-large help small museums? First we need to properly  value their existence. This may be an appropriate time, with AAM’s  current focus on “museums and communities,” to help resolve the  undercount of small museums, especially since many of those institutions  serve a vital community role. 
Second,  we should make greater efforts to welcome their staff members as  colleagues and professionals. We should find ways to make it possible  for them to participate at 
museum  conferences, including the AAM annual meeting, opening the door to  greater cooperation between large and small institutions.
Third,  we need to recognize the particular needs of small museums. Many of our  finest small museums don’t have the resources to vie for accreditation,  even though they may be stellar institutions. Small museums cry out for  a set of simple, basic professional standards tailored to their  functional needs.
Fourth,  the funding community needs to allocate greater resources to support  their survival. If small museums are caring for the majority of this  nation’s artifacts, there must be a way to make more grants and  technical expertise available to support their work. 
Long-time  small museum advocate Ellen Ferguson, director of community relations  at the Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture, University of  Washington, Seattle, acknowledges that this country has a variety of  valuable museum advocacy groups, including AAM and regional and state  associations. “But state associations really are the natural home for  small museums and deserve support for the important frontline work they  do,” says Ferguson, who also served as president of the Washington  Museum Association. “They provide affordable, accessible annual meetings  and hands-on workshops on topics such as conservation, registration,  and simple exhibit techniques.” 
Most  small museums may operate beneath the national radar, but, says  Ferguson, the “truly great thing about our profession is that for each  of our institutions, there is a supportive place to belong.” 
The  Mendocino County Museum’s Snetselaar sums up the challenge for small  museums in this way: “We take what we can get, but we don’t have all of  what we need to get to where we need to go.” That may be true, but small  museums go a long way on what little they’re given. With the support  and encouragement of all of us, these institutions should be able to go a  lot further, deepening the cultural fabric of our nation, community by  community.