Annual Report 2021
MISSION
The National Nordic Museum shares Nordic culture, values, and ideas with people of all ages and backgrounds to create connections, generate dialogue, and inspire new perspectives.
From Hans Aarhus, President, Board of Trustees
In 2021 The National Nordic Museum hosted magnificent exhibitions, received prestigious awards, and garnered generous acknowledgment from our local, national, and international audiences.
Congratulations to Eric Nelson for receiving the Hazelius Medal in Gold at Stockholm’s Nordiska Museet in September 2021. The honor is only awarded in extremely rare cases for distinctive efforts in the promotion of cultural heritage, less than twenty have been given out in the last 140 years. The presentation of the Hazelius Medal to Eric demonstrates the significance of the new Museum among our peers in Scandinavia.
I know we all enjoyed the return of in-person events including several important programs and the 2021 Julefest, our much-loved Christmas festival. More than 12,000 people came out for this event last November benefiting the Museum and launching a joyful season for all of us. It was wonderful to be able to welcome so many of you back to the Museum after numerous restrictions and COVID related closures. Thank you so much for helping to make 2021 a success.
From Earl Ecklund, Treasurer, National Nordic Museum
Through a combination of expense control and increased philanthropy and public support, the Museum was able to remain solvent throughout the pandemic. Relief funds received in 2021 allowed us to address the COVID related losses incurred in 2020. The Museum’s earned revenue sources remained challenged in 2021. However, focused efforts on philanthropy and contributed revenue yielded positive results. In addition to addressing 2020 losses, the overall operational 2021 budget for the Museum rebounded to near prepandemic levels.
In 2021 the Museum completed the Capital Campaign for the New Museum with a generous capstone gift from Barbro Osher. The National Nordic Museum celebrated this significant milestone with the naming of our visiting exhibition space, the Barbro Osher Gallery.
INCOME Contributed Earned Program Special Event GROSS PROFIT EXPENSE Overhead Program Payroll Expenses Special Event TOTAL EXPENSE ADJUSTED NET
ACTUALS
$3.7M $2.5M $3.6M GROSS PROFIT 2019–2021 In 2021 our budget was restored to nearly pre-Pandemic level
2021
$1,986,055 $1,268,794 $88,282 $303,218 $3,646,349 $709,265 $316,380 $2,188,221 $100,073 $3,313,939 $332,410 2020 ACTUALS $1,077,017 $974,174 $91,955 $430,301 $2,573,447 $721,699 $311,639 $2,139,602 $52,261 $3,225,201 ($651,754) 2019 ACTUALS $960,078 $1,767,947 $214,608 $765,910 $3,708,543 $940,287 $338,451 $2,138,335 $254,434 $3,671,507 $37,036
From the Executive Director/CEO Eric Nelson
As we are all aware, the challenges of COVID continued into 2021. The year started with the return of mandated closures for the Museum. When we did re-open, the Museum experienced a slower than anticipated return to in-person participation. This negatively impacted the Museum’s earned revenue sources (admissions, café, store, event rentals).
To operate sustainably, the Museum reduced expenses and sought public and private support to ensure we could continue to provide the robust schedule of exhibition and programs our constituents have become accustomed to. Our community generously stepped forward and we were able to leverage private support from our members and donors to obtain public support through COVID relief and recovery grants.
We invested in expanding our digital capacity and website as well as the quantity and quality of our virtual programs in 2021. Because of this, our audience continues to expand locally, regionally, nationally, and internationally. During 2021, we were able to deliver programs to viewers in all 50 States, all Provinces of Canada, and 70 nations on six continents. While COVID was a major challenge, it was also a significant opportunity that allowed the Museum to lean into the national designation that Congress awarded in 2019.
As we closed the year, we received terrific news that the Museum would be receiving $572,000 in COVID relief funding from King County’s Revive & Thrive program and significant support from the City of Seattle. With this and your continued support, we entered 2022 ready to expand our offerings as a truly national museum of Nordic art, history, and culture.
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EXHIBITIONS
Among Forests and Lakes: Landscape Masterpieces from the Finnish National Gallery, was the first exhibit of 2021. It included an important selection of works rarely seen in the United States that drew critical acclaim. Organized into four themes, the exhibition demonstrated the sophistication of the Finnish art establishment and the concurrent development of the landscape genre from idealized views completed in the artist’s studio to realistic scenes painted en plein air. The National Nordic Museum was the exclusive North American venue for the exhibition.
We were also able to highlight parts of our collection through the exhibit, Sublime Sights: Ski Jumping and Nordic America—a collaboration with the Washington State Ski & Snowboard Museum. The exhibition examined how early Nordic-Americans connected to their adopted land through the sport of ski jumping, it featured ski equipment and memorabilia, photographs, film clips, and oral history interviews to examine the sport’s development and explore its cultural significance. In the summer we presented an exhibition drawn from the recently donated works by Danish-American artist Dines Carlsen. Dines Carlsen: In His Own Manner attracted the attention of scholars and the community.
In October, we opened Paper Dialogues: The Dragon and Our Stories, which received a warm reception from a diverse audience and arts writers alike. The exhibition of papercuts explored the shared motif of the dragon by artists, Xiaoguang Qiao, and Karin Bit Vejle. The exhibit was featured in The Seattle Times, The International Examiner, Crosscut, The Norwegian American Weekly, and other media. Like our other exhibitions throughout the year, this exhibit featured sold-out gallery tours, as well as multiple online offerings. In November, we installed M(other) Tongues: Bodhild and Las Hermanas Iglesias—that explored bicultural (Norwegian and Dominican) identity within a family of artists. Textile artists, Bodhild, Janelle, and Lisa Iglesias, led a workshop for the Nordic Knitting Conference. They also taught high school students at the Seattle Academy, who created works inspired by the exhibit for a virtual student exhibition. During the exhibit the Museum partnered with the Henry Art Gallery on a virtual panel that brought together artists Derrick Adams, Barbara Earl Thomas, Janelle, and Lisa Iglesias for a conversation about intergenerational artistic collaboration.
From the Executive Director/CEO Eric Nelson
Images, clockwise from top: M(other) Tongue gallery
Paper Diaglogues gallery
Dines Carlsen, Self portrait
Sublime Sights: Nordic Ski Jumping and Nordic America gallery
Among Forests and Lakes gallery
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EDUCATION AND VIRTUAL EXHIBITIONS
In 2020, our Education team began working with local area schools to launch virtual exhibitions online in connection with the works on display at the Museum. The first of these exhibitions was Experimental Selfies: Students Respond to Edvard Munch’s Photography. Advanced Placement 2-D Art and Design (Photography) students from four Seattle schools took a virtual tour of The Experimental Self: Edvard Munch’s Photography, which opened at the Museum in October 2020, with curator Pat Berman. Then, as part of their advanced placement studies, they created portraits that responded to Munch’s process and self-exploration.
These portraits were placed on display at the beginning of 2021 on the Museum’s website. Inspired by a virtual viewing of the National Nordic Museum’s M(other) Tongues in 2021, students in the Fiber Arts at Seattle Academy used paint and textiles to create their own works. An exhibition of their work online was made possible with support from ArtsWA.
Other Education programs included programming for children through the year, including craft classes and Nordic Stories. In August, we also saw a return of summer camps (virtual only in 2021) with our partners at Seattle Children’s Theatre.
Images, clockwise from bottom left: Students work from the M(other) Tongues exhibit
Edvard Munch self portrait
Student self-portraits from Seattle area High Schools
From the Executive Director/CEO Eric Nelson
COLLECTIONS
The Museum’s collection expanded in 2021 with the donation of the Ibsen Water Ski Corporate Archives. Don Ibsen, Sr., an American of Danish descent, was among the first in the country to develop the sport of water skiing in the 1920s. He was a tireless promoter of the sport. The donation includes Ibsen water skis and an archive that traces the regional, national, and international history of the sport through photographs, and a variety of ephemera dating from the 1920s until 1980.
Other important additions to the collection include prominent works by Nordic glass artists such as Bertil Valin and Ulrica Hydman Valin from the collection of Herb and Lucy Pruzan. Additional gifts include Pacific Northwest sculptor Ron Petty’s working model and documentation for the Seattle Fishermen’s Memorial; the Nordic art and architecture library of University of Utah Professor and Dean Emeritus William C. Miller; Dr. Benjamin Hong’s collection of ephemera from the occupation of Denmark during World War II; and a gold nugget necklace and other items owned by Inga Sjolseth Kolloen, a Norwegian-American participant in the Klondike Gold Rush.
The Museum added a labyrinth designed by world renowned public artist Gordon Huether to its Fisherman’s Sun Terrace in 2021. The opening event in August included honored guests Robert O’Driscoll, Consul General of Ireland in San Francisco; Helge Marstrander, Counsul/ Deputy Chief of Mission, Royal Norwegian Consulate; Jeanne Kohl-Welles, King County Council Member; and project artist Gordon Huether.
Images, from upper left: Balcony view of the Labyrinth and guests
Image of Don Ibsen on water skis is from Life Magazine, August 12, 1957, photo by Marshall Lockman.
Image of Ron Petty from a postcard titled “Fishermen’s Memorial Work in Progress,” photo by Kurt Smith, 1986.
Stig Persson, (b. 1960 in Copenhagen), Layers No. 2, 2009.
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PROGRAMS
The Museum presented more than 100 programs online and in person in 2021. Nordic Talks: Food Security and Sustainability, organized by the Museum and supported by the Nordic Council of Ministers, created a series of thematic panels. Nordic Talks examined clever solutions to timely problems in the areas of fine dining, food processing and packaging, and agriculture. One talk, Is There a Plan Bee?, can be found on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and the Nordic Talks website.
In 2021, the Nordic Knitting Conference was a hybrid experience over two weekends in November. The conference engaged participants from all over the world. Lisa and Janelle Iglesias provided the keynote address. Other virtual programs included a symposium titled On the Front Line: Arctic Museums and Climate Change, which the Museum organized in collaboration with the American Alliance of Museums; the International Council of Museums; and the National Museum Directors Council (UK). The symposium convened speakers in seven countries to discuss the impact of the climate emergency
on Arctic museums and the indigenous communities they serve. The same week, we presented as a hybrid event featuring Finland’s Minister of Transport and Communications Timo Harakka in conversation with Museum Trustee and Microsoft CVP Tuula Rytila.
Members and non-members were engaged in more than a half dozen book talks, our popular Crafts & Cocktails program, and two film festivals throughout the year. Many of our Museum talks can still be accessed on the Museum’s YouTube channel. Children’s programs were offered throughout the year and included craft classes and Nordic Stories. In August, virtual summer camps returned which were offered in partnership with Seattle Children’s Theatre.
Nordic Knitting Conference 2021
From the Executive Director/CEO Eric Nelson
EVENTS
In November, we presented a very successful reimagining of Julefest. Thanks in part to a $50,000 grant from the City of Seattle’s Department of Neighborhoods, we were able to cover the increased cost of developing an outdoor winter market. The grant condition required that we offer Julefest free of admission. Our outdoor market was extremely popular, and we welcomed over 12,000 guests! The feedback from attendees was overwhelmingly positive, and many commented on the quality of the new layout and that the event provided a much-needed reprieve from COVID. The community expressed many comments of gratitude for the experience. Additional events during 2021 included a Virtual Northern Lights Auktion in June and the very popular Run Like a Viking in August.
Images, from top to bottom: Virtual Northern Lights Auktion (top three pictures)
Julefest 2021 (bottom three pictures)
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Virtual
MEMBERSHIP
General membership exceeded 4,100 households by the close of the year. The Museum had hoped for a quicker recovery from COVID and expected audiences (and Members) to return earlier in 2021. Our budgeted General Membership revenue was ambitious; and we ended the year slightly below budget. The President’s Club, our leadership giving level, finished the year strong, reaching the goal of $140,000 and 120 Member households. We will be expanding our Membership possibilities including a new digital Membership in connection with our growing national and international reach as well as easily accessible online programming.
VOLUNTEERS
We were delighted to welcome back Volunteers to the Museum and events, beginning with the opening of Among Forests and Lakes in May 2021. Throughout the year, our Volunteers made many events possible and were instrumental in the success of Julefest in November—particularly the many bakers who prepared Nordic treats for Goodies2Go!
From the Executive Director/CEO Eric Nelson
MARKETING
Throughout 2021, our Marketing team built a robust outreach plan that included both paid and earned media. Overall, the year finished with statistics showing a significant increase in all areas: 13% increase in email subscribers, 21% increase in social media followers, and 18% increase in unique visitors to the website. In part, these increases were driven by new community partnerships with other local museums, Visit Seattle, and Puget Sound Attractions Council. A video featuring Seattle Kraken announcer Everett “Fitz” Fitzhugh at the Museum played repeatedly to excited crowds at the Climate Pledge Arena throughout 2021. The video clip also earned thousands of views on the Museum’s YouTube channel. Popular consumer websites like Rick Steves and AARP, and magazines like AAA Journey, featured the Museum as a gem of a tourist destination, driving thousands of new visitors to the website and social media as well as traffic to the Museum.
Local media took particular interest in our exhibitions toward the end of 2021, with stellar coverage of Paper Dialogues and M(other) Tongues. One of the region’s most popular TV programs, Evening, used the Museum as a filming location twice during the year and featured Julefest as a recommended festival.
Images, clockwise from top left: Eveningfilming at the Museum in 2021 Eric Nelson answers questions in The Seattle Times feature on things to do in Ballard post-pandemic Publications and posters produced by the Museum’s Marketing team Metro bus stop on Market Street featuring the National Nordic Museum
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DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION
Throughout 2021, the Museum worked to identify vendors and to begin building a new website and a new ticketing system that would allow for the best Member and visitor experience virtually and in-person. We also began to build a customer management system that would enhance our knowledge of our audience, better serve their needs, and provide more information applicable to strategic planning for the coming years.
From the Executive Director/CEO Eric Nelson
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THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS 13
Keta Enterprises Nysether Family Foundation Krueger
Guendolen Carkeek Plestcheeff Fund for the Decorative and Design Arts
And additional support from Thank you to our media sponsors
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
Trustees
Hans Aarhus (President)
Jay L. Bruns, III (Vice President)
Earl Ecklund (Treasurer)
Monica Langfeldt (Secretary)
Thomas Malone (Immediate Past President)
Electa Johnson Anderson
Lars Anderson
Anne-Lise Berger
Jann Blackbourn
Ray Brandstrom
Ulf Edwaldsson
Ann-Charlotte Gavel Adams
Mike Hlastala
Jane Klausen
Terje Leiren
Kurt Manchester
Jens Molback
Kurt Ness
Krystn Nesselquist
Per Norén
Aaron Overland
Tuula Rytilä
Maria Jones Staaf
Johan Erik Strand
Henrik Strabo
Heli Suokko
Lisa Toftemark
Honorary Consuls
Mark T. Schleck, Honorary Consul, Denmark
Matti Suokko, Honorary Consul, Finland
Kristiina Hiukka, Honorary Vice Consul, Finland
Geir Jonsson, Honorary Consul, Iceland
Viggo Forde, Honorary Consul, Norway
Petra Hilleberg, Honorary Consul, Sweden
Honorary Trustees
Senator Reuven Carlyle
Leif Eie
Irma Goertzen
Senator Mary Margaret Haugen
Lars Jonsson
Council Member Jeanne Kohl-Welles
Senator Marko Liias
Fidelma McGinn
Representative Gael Tarleton Margaret Wright
MUSEUM STAFF
Executive
Eric Nelson, Executive Director and Chief Executive Officer
Andrea Millikan, Chief Operating Officer
Jacob Andsager, Head of Digital Strategy
Leela Martin, Administrative Assistant
Development
Erik Pihl, Development Director
Jenny Iverson, Development Manager
Hanna Corneliussen, Donor Services Coordinator
Taylor Morgan, Senior Grant Writer
Dan Saunders, Special Event Coordinator
Curatorial
Leslie Anne Anderson, Director of Collections, Exhibitions, and Programs
Gillian Cobb, Public Programs Producer
Alison DeRiemer, Archivist and Oral History Specialist
Kate Dugdale, Education and Interpretation Specialist
Peter Klett, Exhibition Designer and Preparator
Kaia Wahmanholm, Registrar and Collections Specialist
Marketing & Communications
Rosemary Jones, Director of Marketing
Carly Hinman,Marketing Specialist
Dana Lo, Marketing Assistant
Janay Nowlin, Graphic Designer
Finance & HR
Pamela Brooks, Director of Finance and Human Resources
Carolyn Carlstrom, Bookkeeper
Michael Ide, HR Coordinator
Timothy Krumland, Volunteer Coordinator
Operations & Facilities
Charlie Sullivan, Director of Operations and Facilities
Donna Antonucci, Guest Services and Event Associate
Roberta Chen, Retail and E-Commerce Specialist
Allie Cheroutes, Venue Services Coordinator
Abigail Fredrickson, Store and Guest Services Associate
Seth Harrell, Facilities Manager
Damion Hernstrom, Guest Services and Store Associate
Mary Hill, Guest Services and Store Associate
Joni Hughes, Guest Services and Retail Manager
Kendall Martin, Guest Services and Store Associate
Neil Tiland, Custodian/Facilities Assistant
With support from the Nordic Embassies
2655 NW Market Street Seattle, WA 98107 206.789.5707 nordicmuseum.org