The Nationwide Gallery in London is increasing its influencer community. Final 12 months it launched the 200 Creators programme as a part of its bicentenary celebrations, choosing 200 social media content material creators to turn into affiliated with the museum. The content material produced as a part of the programme generated 42 million views and greater than 2.2 million engagements throughout social media in 2024, in line with a museum press assertion.
The museum has now launched the subsequent part of its 200 Creators community. This 12 months’s cohort will likely be on a smaller scale—it should tackle 50 new content material creators (purposes open till 31 August), providing entry to exhibition previews, workshops and occasions on the museum (however not full membership, which was a part of the programme final 12 months). The creators will even be provided out-of-hours gallery entry to make content material or benefit from the works with out the crowds. The inaugural programme had 20 of its 200 influencers turn into “Artistic Collaborators”, with a stipend of £4,000 every to help their content material creation. This 12 months, there will likely be 4 paid alternatives, which will likely be provided to 4 of the 50 chosen creators.
The steered necessities for candidates have remained the identical: at the very least 50,000 followers on YouTube; 100,000 followers on Instagram; or 50,000 followers and one million likes on TikTok. However Ellie Wyant, the Nationwide Gallery’s senior communications supervisor, urges those that have an interest however don’t fill these standards, or who’ve followings on different platforms, to nonetheless apply. “We’re excited to search out new individuals who we would not have come throughout earlier than, or who won’t have come throughout us,” Wyant says. “We’re searching for individuals throughout the UK once more, and throughout all totally different pockets of the web. Final 12 months, we had such an incredible array of individuals specialising in artwork historical past, but in addition bakers, potters, comedians and tailors!” The 50 creators will likely be chosen by an inner panel and introduced at a launch occasion on the museum on 27 October.
The success of the 200 Creators programme has not gone unnoticed by different museums. “I get emails weekly from individuals at museums desirous to do one thing comparable,” says Wyant, who has additionally spoken broadly in regards to the influencer programme at occasions and conferences. “It isn’t one measurement suits all, and I do not assume even we may have accomplished this if it hadn’t been for our 2 hundredth birthday. It takes lots of people and funds—200 Creators was three to 4 years within the making. However it’s wonderful that it has turn into one thing that different museums need to be concerned in, and that they’ll take inspiration from,” she provides.
Wyant is working workshops on working with influencers on the museums collaborating on the Nationwide Gallery’s Masterpiece Tour initiative. The 2-year lengthy tour will see the London museum ship main works from the gathering throughout the UK to collaborating museums, beginning with Claude Monet’s The Petit Bras of the Seine at Argenteuil (1872) heading to the Sainsbury Centre for Visible Arts in Norwich subsequent month.
The Nationwide Gallery is maintaining in contact with the creators from the inaugural programme, who will now tackle an alumni function. And the collaboration has additionally borne fruit for a lot of of them. Adeche Atelier—the collective title of the artistic couple Adwoa Botchey and Solomon Adebiyi, who paint works about African mythology and spirituality—have been approached for work as a direct results of their partnership with the museum. The duo say they had been commissioned by the BBC and the Royal Academy of Arts to do a portray impressed by a brand new collection on the Renaissance, and have additionally been approached by the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge, due to having taken half within the 200 Creators Community initiative. “It’s wonderful that different establishments and museums have now been reaching out to us,” Adebiyi provides.








