
26-year-old New Yorker gathers 40,000 TikTok followers in her quest to visit all the city’s museums
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With 136 museums documented since 2021, Jane August still has about 64 to go by her estimation. She may get there by the time she turns 30.
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August 7, 2025
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Success·Social Media26-year-old New Yorker gathers 40,000 TikTok ers in her quest to visit all the city’s museumsBy Katherine RothBy The Associated PressBy Katherine RothBy The Associated Press Jane August is visiting a lot of museums.Spencer Platt/Getty ImagesMuseums throughout New York City were just reopening in the wake of the COVID pandemic when Jane August launched what seemed a straightforward plan: She would travel to every single museum in the city, ducing a short log of each one
She figured it would take three years at most
But with 136 museums documented since 2021, she still has 64 to go by her estimation
And with new museums opening and some old ones changing so dramatically that they deserve a revisit, the 26-year-old now says she’s realistically aiming to complete the ject before she’s 30. “At first, I started the ject for myself to safely get out of my house and experience culture in the city again,” said August, who grew up in Arizona and has d in New York for nine years
She said she wasn’t a big museum person before starting the ject, and had only been to around seven at the time
But as she began, the plan quickly evolved. “I decided TikTok would be a cool way to document this so my friends could keep up with my journey and maybe discover something new,” August said
Her audience has since far expanded with 40,000 ers across social platforms
Museums big and small, Manhattan and beyond Visiting its museums has sparked a new appreciation for New York City, she said, as well as for the sheer breadth of what’s on offer, particularly for those willing to explore smaller museums and those in the boroughs beyond Manhattan
And yes, she has favorites. “I love Poster House
It’s the first poster museum in the country, has great gramming and is free on Fridays,” she says of the largely unsung museum at 23rd Street and Sixth Avenue, which features graphic design and advertising posters ranging from Art Nouveau to political paganda
Others on her list of favorites include the Tenement Museum in lower Manhattan and the Museum of the Moving Image in Queens, as well as three Brooklyn museums: the Brooklyn Seltzer Museum, the New York Sign Museum and the Red Hook Pinball Museum
She also has a soft spot for The Paley Center for Media NYC in midtown Manhattan. “They have s with every TV show you could possibly think of
It’s amazing,” she said of The Paley Center
Staten Island offerings are worth the ferry ride As for the city’s smallest borough, the ferry ride to Staten Island (free, with views of the Statue of Liberty along the way) is well worth the trip for museum-goers, she said
The borough features the Newhouse Center of Contemporary Art, as well as the Alice Austen House, a Victorian Gothic house important to LGBTQ+ history
It was the of one of the country’s earliest and most lific female photographers, famous for documenting the city’s immigrant communities. “You wouldn’t imagine that Staten Island had one of the gayest museums in New York, dedicated to a queer photographer, but it does,” August said
Staten Island is also to the Jacques Marchais Museum of Tibetan Art and the Chinese Scholar’s Garden, which claims to be one of only two authentic classical outdoor Chinese gardens in the United States. “It’s so peaceful and quiet, and I love riding the ferry,” August said
Taking advantage of free days and slow hours While museums can be expensive, she said she makes good use of museum passes at her local library, and that many museums have days or times when they are free
And because her “day jobs” tend to be at night — she works at different venues in ticketing and duction, and also bartends — she’s able to visit museums in the middle of weekdays, when they tend to be less crowded
August recently became a licensed New York City tour guide, and she says it’s given her a renewed appreciation both of the city and its visitors
She’s also seen a few trends take hold, the rise in museum gramming aimed at younger audiences and the trend away from chronological exhibits, which she says make return visits less enticing. “So many of us are desperate for third spaces,” she said, referring to a place distinct from both and work where people can relax or socialize. “For a lot of us, we have a hunger to come back and visit again, especially when it’s free.” Although big museums the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museum of Modern Art can certainly be crowded, August says New York isn’t facing nearly the level of overcrowding as in European cities Paris
And at peak times and seasons, summer, it’s nice to know there are plenty of smaller museums to visit
Seeing the whole city “I think this is especially important for the lesser-known museums that don’t often get press or social media features,” she said. “There are some small museums that get a huge bump in attendance and press after I have posted my s so it’s exciting to be able to play a small role in that success.” As for her motivation to continue the ject, she said “it boils down to the people
I get to connect with fascinating and passionate people who are making these museums what they are and I get to connect with enthusiasts who want to find something fun to do with their weekend.” For anyone interested in giving something this a go for themselves, she says it takes a lot of endurance. “Be prepared to go to corners of the city you never considered — I’m talking edges of the Bronx and middle of Staten Island,” she said. “But if you’re up for the challenge, you’ll bably gain a lot of insight on not just the museums and their content, but also the communities they serve.” Introducing the 2025 Fortune 500, the definitive ranking of the biggest companies in America
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