The Museum of Old and New Art (MONA), the private museum built by Hobart-born professional gambler and art collector David Walsh beneath the Moorilla winery estate on the Berriedale peninsula north of Hobart's CBD, has been the single most transformative cultural infrastructure investment in Tasmanian history and one of the most significant interventions in Australian cultural life since the opening of the Sydney Opera House. Since its opening in 2011, MONA has drawn over 4 million visitors to Tasmania from across Australia and the world, quadrupling the visitor figures that the Tasmanian tourism industry had achieved before the museum opened and establishing Hobart as a global arts destination that attracts the international cultural traveller who would not previously have included Tasmania on the itinerary that the established arts capitals of Sydney, Melbourne, and the international cities provided.
The museum's collection, assembled by Walsh from the proceeds of his algorithmic gambling systems and reflecting his interest in death, sexuality, religion, and the human obsessions that the art he collects addresses, provides the intellectual provocation and the physical confrontation that the installation and the programming that MONA delivers through the underground galleries creates. The 'O' app that replaces the conventional museum guide with the artist-led commentary that Walsh and the curators have assembled, choosing between the 'Art Wank' (the traditional art historical commentary) and the 'Gonzo' (Walsh's own irreverent perspective), democratises the museum interpretation in the way that MONA's philosophy requires.
The Dark MOFO winter festival, the annual winter festival of dark and challenging art, music, food, and the fire ceremonies that MONA organises in the Hobart winter of June and July when the other Australian cities flee the cold, has established the counter-programming position that turns Tasmania's winter disadvantage into the atmospheric advantage that a winter festival of darkness can exploit. The festival's programming of the international artists and performers who engage with the darkness, death, and the transgressive themes that MONA's ethos sustains attracts the festival tourism market that values the cultural programme over the conventional beach holiday comfort that winter escapes typically provide.
The economic impact of MONA on Hobart and Tasmania, measured in the direct visitor spending and the induced tourism that MONA's reputation creates for the broader Tasmanian visitor economy, has been estimated at over $100 million annually, making the private museum the most significant economic driver of the Tasmanian tourism industry's growth in the decade since the museum opened. The transformation of Hobart's accommodation supply, from the limited hotel stock of the pre-MONA era to the premium hotel developments that the visitor demand MONA generates has sustained, reflects the economic catalyst role that a single transformative cultural investment can play in a regional tourist economy.
This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.