• AJ
  • dance
  • ideas
  • issues
  • media
  • music
  • people
  • theatre
  • words
  • visual
  • ajblogs
  • about AJ
    • advertise

ArtsAudience

The Audience Is Changing!

  • AJ Home
  • This Week in Audience
  • Featured Audience
  • AJ Audience
  • about our audience project ~

This Week In Audience: Are Artists Engagers Or Leaders?

November 26, 2017 by Douglas McLennan Leave a Comment

This Week's Insights: Have we "engaged" with audiences to the detriment of leading them?... Rotten Tomatoes as whipping boy of criticism... Why are museums charging scholars for images?... Should artists care where their audiences see them? Create Audiences Or Engage Them? In this year of ascending populism in politics, many are looking at the phenomenon and examining the … [Read more...]

This Week In Audience: Is “Engagement” The Enemy Of Artistic Depth?

November 19, 2017 by Douglas McLennan 2 Comments

This Week's Insights: Is our focus on engagement hurting art?... Why it's difficult to cut ticket prices... Are algorithmic content platforms killing originality?... How to motivate volunteers in amateur theatre. Engagement At The Cost Of Content? It's difficult to find an arts institution these days that isn't focusing on how to better engage audiences. But is this … [Read more...]

This Week in Audience: Is Demand-Pricing An Audience Deathstar?

November 14, 2017 by Douglas McLennan Leave a Comment

This Week's Insights: Does demand-pricing alienate audiences?...The audience inside the orchestra... Redefining what it means to interact with an audience... Do people look at art in museums?... Reinventing the meaning of culture in a performing arts center. Demand-Based Pricing - Revenue Enhancer Or Audience Deathstar? Marketers are in love with demand-pricing as a way of … [Read more...]

This Week in Audience: Focusing On Limitations And Celebrating Them

October 23, 2017 by Douglas McLennan Leave a Comment

This Week's Insights: Is Hollywood's audience problem really a failure to focus?... A way of appreciating opera that celebrates its failings... When you've vacated your hall and the audience won't follow... Theatre of the living room. Hollywood's Audience Problem: Industry leaders have recently been complaining about Rotten Tomatoes for some of its box office woes. The … [Read more...]

This Week In Audience: Start With An Audience, Then Build The Product???

October 17, 2017 by Douglas McLennan Leave a Comment

This Week's Insights: The (very) elusive Bilbao Effect, 20 years later... Is sensory pollution harming our ability to appreciate art?...  Audience first, and THEN the content?... Oh, look, there's a squirrel... Why science fiction is suddenly everywhere. Twenty Years Of Chasing The Bilbao Effect  The Guggenheim transformed the town of Bilbao. The power of art. Ever since, … [Read more...]

« Previous Page
Next Page »

WALLACE FOUNDATION AUDIENCE RESOURCES

NEW!



WORLD MUSIC/CRASHarts Tests New Format New Name to Draw New Audiences
This article and video are part of a series describing the early work of some of the 25 performing arts organizations participating in The Wallace Foundation’s $52 million Building Audiences for Sustainability initiative. Launched in 2015 in response to concerns about a declining audience base for a number of major art forms, the endeavor seeks to help the organizations strengthen their audience-building efforts, see if this contributes to their financial sustainability, and develop insights from the work for the wider arts field.


Think Opera’s Not for You? Opera Theatre of Saint Louis Says Think Again
Analysis showed that while the company’s core audience bought several tickets each year, even tending to schedule their May and June around opera season, newcomers behaved differently.




Can the City's Boom Mean New Audiences for the Seattle Symphony?
In line with the community’s spirit of innovation, Seattle Symphony is using audience research to help target and woo recent transplants.





Denver Center Theatre Company is Cracking the Millennial Code...One Step at a Time
The average single-ticket buyer at the Denver Center Theatre Company is 50 years old and the average subscriber is 63, despite the fact that millennials, a group often defined as people born between 1981 and 1997, compose the largest age group in Denver. Since 2010, the Denver Center has been engaged in an iterative process of experimentation, evaluation and refinement to help reverse this trend.



The Party’s Still a Hit: The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum Builds on its Millennial Momentum

That ongoing research has revealed areas to adjust, as well as successes. Soon after the re-opening, for example, the team partnered with a local music school, taking the opportunity to hold 45-minute concerts in Calderwood Hall. But in part through survey results, it realized the approach didn’t work. [read more]



Austin Ballet’s “Familiarity” Problem And How It Learned To Connect With New Audiences



“Encouraging people to attend the ballet more often was less about increasing their familiarity with productions and more about bridging an uncertainty gap. “Familiarity is about information,” notes Martin, “whereas uncertainty about how an experience will feel is much more personal. You can give somebody a lot of information but that’s not necessarily going to reassure them that they’re going to belong in that audience.”

How the Contemporary Jewish Museum
Expanded its Reach



​​​The Contemporary Jewish Museum in San Francisco moves to a larger space and secures a nine-fold increase in family visitors of all backgrounds.

ALSO:

VISIT THE WALLACE KNOWLEDGE CENTER

Copyright © 2025 · Magazine Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in