Maria Balshaw, the director of Tate, has expressed her views on BP’s sponsorship agreement with the British Museum (BM), stating that “the public has moved to a position where they think it [the BP arrangement] is inappropriate.”
In an interview with the Observer about her new book, *Gathering of Strangers: Why Museums Matter* (Tate Publishing), Balshaw also discussed the controversy surrounding Tate Britain’s 2021-22 exhibition *Hogarth and Europe*. The show faced criticism, particularly regarding the wall labels written by contemporary commentators, which one critic labeled as “wokeish drivel.”
In the interview, Balshaw is asked about sponsorship because, according to the Observer, she is “critical of the British Museum’s new £50m partnership with BP” in her new book. She responds: “I’ve never known a time when we weren’t concerned about funding; that’s a normal part of life as a museum director…. But the issue the BM faces in taking BP’s money is that the public now views it as inappropriate. There’s a dissonance between wanting to be seen as highly sensitive to other cultures and careful about our resource consumption, and accepting money from a company that hasn’t shown a true commitment to change. The new director of the British Museum [Nicholas Cullinan] will have to address a lot of public dismay.”
BP Deal of British Museum
In 2023 The British Museum said in a statement British Petroleum (BP) will provide £50 million (~$63 million) in funding over the next decade to help the museum meet its carbon neutrality and facility modernization goals.