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Glenbow to offer free general admission permanently after Shaw family donates $35M

Calgary's Glenbow Museum announced Thursday it will offer free general admissionpermanently, after a donation worth tens of millions of dollars.

Access to arts and culture will no longer be a privilege, 'it will be a right,' museum CEO says

A rendering of the reimagined Glenbow Museum shows a tall, modern white buildin gin Calgary's downtown.
A rendering of the reimagined Glenbow Museum. (Submitted by the Glenbow Museum)

Calgary's Glenbow Museumwill offer free general admissionpermanently thanks to a donation worth tens of millions of dollars.

Julie Shaw, the president of theShaw Family Foundation, announced the$25-million JRShaw Free Admissions Endowment at a Thursday news conference.

It was also attended by Alberta Premier Jason Kenney, Calgary Mayor Jyoti Gondekand Calgary-Skyview Liberal MP George Chahal.

The donation is intended to honour the legacy of her father, JRShaw, who founded Shaw Communications and Corus Entertainmentand loved art, Julie said.

"We are very, very proud to make a donation that honours JR the best way we know how by building upon his passion for Canadian art and artists, and passing it along for future generations to enjoywithout any barriers," she said.

"We can make this Calgary institution, and all that it has to offer, accessible to everyone without the restriction of having to pay to enter the building."

The Shaw family's donation will also fund a $10-million endowment to create the JRShaw Institute for Canadian Art.

The museum says it will feature annual exhibitions, diverse programs, an artist-in-residence programandan internship and fellowship program.

Kenney says new Glenbowwill showcase culture,heritage

The museum, which opened in 1966, is closed andundergoing a renovation called Glenbow Reimagined.

The free admission endowment, said Glenbow CEO Nicholas R. Bell, will allowthe museum to rewrite its social contract with the community.

"In Calgary, access to arts and culture will no longer be a privilege. It will be a right," Bell said.

So far,the museum has raised $152 million in public and private support for the project but is resetting its campaign goal to $175 million.

"I look forward to working with our supporters here at home, and across Canada, to ensure every possible benefit for this community is achieved in the new Glenbow," Bell said.

Kenney saidthe project willshowcasethe culture and heritage "from this part of the world."

"GlenbowReimagined, I think, is going to put us very much on the radarscreen of visitors from around the world," Kenney said.

"We also have a world class cultural life, and Glenbow Reimagined is a critical part of that."

The museum is expected to reopen in 2024. In the meantime, some of its 250,000 articles will be on exhibit at a downtown satellite site in March.