MAKING MUSEUM RESEARCH ACCESSIBLE FOR ALL
Stephen Reily, Founding Director, Remuseum
March 24, 2026
Do you remember the first time you wanted to find data about museums and felt like you were having to build a list by yourself? I do, which is one reason I was excited to work with Jen Benoit-Bryan of SMU Data Arts and a host of museum research colleagues (all of whom joined a convening on research that Remuseum co-hosted with Art Bridges Foundation last year) to develop the FIRST Art Museum Research Guide.
We all hope this guide will become the one-stop shop for anyone who is looking for publicly-available data on art museums.
Making publicly available data about museums easier to find will be good for the public and good for museums.
It’s good for the public because it should be easier for the public to understand these critical public institutions; too much museum data has been kept behind walls. Data accessibility is connected to museum accessibility.
It’s also good for museums, because at a time when museums need all the good and innovative ideas they can find, they know those ideas can’t all come from within. Sharing more information with more people will give a lot more brains a chance to come up with new ideas for the field.
If you have art museum research that is available to the public that isn’t on the list, please let us know and we’ll add it.
Thanks go to our convening partners, all of them groups that share museum data with the public, including:
- AAM (American Alliance of Museums)
- AAMD (Association of Art Museum Directors)
- Art Bridges Foundation
- Black Trustee Alliance
- Burns Halperin Report
- Collaboration for Ongoing Visitor Experience Studies (COVES)(at the Museum of Science, Boston)
- Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art
- I/O (affiliated with Indiana University)
- Ithaka S+R
- Knology
- Museums Moving Forward
- SMU DataArts
- Slover Linnett at NORC (affiliated with University of Chicago)
- Wilkening Consulting
































