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The VAG will have security guards and volunteers to monitor visitors.
“If there’s a bit of a jam happening, that’s where our volunteers and guards will maybe ask people to move along, and maybe go to another floor,” said Augatis.
Staff at both institutions will be wearing masks in public areas, and it is “highly recommended” that visitors wear masks as well. But is not mandatory.
The Maritime Museum will reopen with a new show, On The Shore, featuring 44 paintings of the B.C. coast from the Bill and Mary Everett Collection, including two by works by Emily Carr and one by E.J. Hughes.
The VAG has a new exhibition culled from works in its collection, The Tin Man Was a Dreamer: Allegories, Poetics and Performances of Power. It was supposed to open in March but was delayed, as was another a new video and photographic installation, Matilda Aslizadeh’s Moly and Kassandra.
The VAG’s big summer show, Modern in the Making: Post-War Craft and Design in British Columbia, is being installed and will be opening July 18.
The Maritime Museum will be opening Thursday through Sunday, while the VAG will be open seven days a week.
“We would love to see the numbers come back to the museum, but we also anticipate that for the first few days or even weeks it might be a bit difficult,” said Schokkenbroek.
“People will be apprehensive, people will be anxious, maybe reluctant, and wait and see how things are being done.”



![Vancouver, BC: MAY2020 06, 2020 -- Museum of Vancouver in Vancouver, BC Wednesday, May 6, 2020. No set-date has been announced for the opening of public spaces due to the Covid-19 pandemic. (Photo by Jason Payne/ PNG) (For story by Kevin Griffin) ORG XMIT: covidreopen [PNG Merlin Archive]](https://postmediavancouversun2.files.wordpress.com/2020/06/png-0506n-covidreopen-007.jpg?quality=5&strip=all&w=100)
