Museums are interesting. This place where we're almost buying admission to take a break from our lives.
Museums are good things, places to look and absorb and learn.
The textiles have been sent to museums all over the world, but we don't actually know much about the people themselves.
In museums and palaces we are alternate radicals and conservatives.
People come to museums for storytelling and engagement, and the technology needs to facilitate that.
Small museums are great. Big museums are a drag.
American museums have become cautious, because it is very hard to get money to do something different or controversial.
The museums and parks are graveyards above the ground- congealed memories of the past that act as a pretext for reality.
Museums are for dead artists. I'd never show my work in the Tate. You'd never get me in that place.
Museums are like sports stadiums, hotels and hospitals they are in the category of captive-audience dining.
More and more, museums will look at restaurants and chefs differently - as if they are curating art.
Museums are not normally presenting the works on the walls as provocations to work. It's more like going to a Jacuzzi.
I do not approve of museums trying just to get people to come in. Whistler was very, very clear on this.
There are several museums that have expressed interest in it, and one thing I've found is museums don't have any money.
I open events for museums and I do charity work and photography.
The number of great museums and nonprofits versus the number of corporate headquarters is incredibly out of whack.
There are wonderful museums with lots of photographs of 1920's musicals.