Most physical museums now have an online presence with varying degrees of online information. At one end of the spectrum, museums may provide simple contact and background information plus a list of exhibitions (brochure museums). On the other end of the spectrum, there are museums that exist only online, or those that have a physical building but offer extensive online exhibits, interactive online features, multimedia, and searchable or browsable collections (content museums, learning museums, virtual museums). The following are a few other museums online: •
Carnamah Historical Society is an Australian historical society whose
Virtual Museum: to be known and distinguished as Carnamah won a Museums and Galleries National Award in 2014. •
Central Illinois' On-Line Broadcast Museum is a virtual museum that documents, in detail, the history of television stations broadcasting in Central Illinois. •
GLBT History Museum of Central Florida is an organization founded in 2005 that hosts a virtual museum and organizes mobile displays. •
Google Arts & Culture is an online compilation of high-resolution images of artworks from galleries worldwide, as well as a virtual tour of the galleries in which they are housed. The project was launched on 1 February 2011 by
Google, and includes works in the
Tate Gallery,
London; the
Metropolitan Museum of Art,
New York City; and the
Uffizi,
Florence. •
International Museum of Women is an online-only museum that does not have a physical building and instead offers online exhibitions about women's issues globally as well as an
online community. Online exhibitions include "Imagining Ourselves" (launched 2006) about women's identity, "Women, Power and Politics" (2008), and "Economica: Women and the Global Economy" (2009). • International New Media Gallery (INMG) is an online museum specialising in moving image and screen-based art. The INMG is dedicated to exploring current debates and topics in art history: touching on areas such as migration, war, environmental activism, and the Internet itself. The gallery publishes extensive academic catalogues alongside its exhibitions. It also hosts spaces for discussion and debate, both online and offline. •
Internetmuseum is a Swedish digital museum that opened in 2014. The ambition of the museum is to spread knowledge of the
Swedish history of Internet and to preserve the digital heritage. •
Mobile Phone Museum is a virtual museum curating mobile phones and related telecommunication technology, founded in 2021. •
Museum With No Frontiers is a virtual museum set up by MWNF and launched in 2005. It is a real museum, including a Collection, Exhibitions and a Database, and is the result of international cooperation between museums and cultural heritage organisations, based on the MWNF methodology. So far, three thematic museums have been completed: Discover Islamic Art (www.discoverislamicart.org) (online since 2005, Database of 2,113 objects and monuments from 22 countries, 19 Virtual Exhibitions); Discover Baroque Art (discoverbaroqueart.org) (online since 2010, Database of 588 objects and monuments from 7 countries, 9 Virtual Exhibitions), and Sharing History (sharinghistory.org) (focusing on Arab-Ottoman-European relations between 1815 and 1918, online since 2015, Database of 2,636 objects and monuments from 22 countries, 10 Virtual Exhibitions). •
Museum of Art & Photography (MAP) in Bengaluru, India, launched its digital museum, one of the first in the country, in December 2020, taking its collection, exhibitions, and programming online. MAP's mission is to take art and culture into the heart of the community, making the arts accessible to all. Through the digital museum, MAP is reaching out to and educating audiences all over the world about Indian visual culture. •
National Portal and Digital Repository for Museums of India is designed and developed by
Human-Centred Design and Computing Group of
Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (C-DAC), India in collaboration and with funding support from Ministry of Culture, Government of India. The National Portal for Museums of India was formally launched on 21 October 2014. The portal offers search & retrieval and integrated access to digitized collections of 10 national museums namely National Museum of India, New Delhi; Allahabad Museum, Allahabad; Indian Museum, Kolkata; National Gallery of Modern Arts (NGMA), New Delhi; National Gallery of Modern Arts (NGMA), Mumbai; National Gallery of Modern Arts (NGMA), Bengaluru; Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) Museum, Goa; Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) Museum, Nagarjunakonda; Salar Jung Museum, Hyderabad and Victoria Memorial Hall, Kolkata. All participating museums are using
JATAN: Virtual Museum Builder, a software developed by C-DAC for the purpose of standardization. The National Portal for Museums of India also won the Special Mention Grand Jury Manthan Award in e-Culture, Heritage & Tourism category in 2015. •
St George's Museum, founded in Walkley near Sheffield in 1875 by the Victorian art critic
John Ruskin and later dispersed, has been recreated as a virtual museum by the "Ruskin at Walkley" project. •
Tucson Gay Museum is an online-only archives museum that, for security reasons as a minority group archives museum, does not use a publicly accessible physical building and instead offers online exhibitions about Arizona LGBTQIA+ history. •
UK's Culture24 is an online guide to public museums, galleries, libraries, archives, heritage sites, and science centres in the United Kingdom. •
Virtual Museum of Canada is
Canada's national virtual museum. With over 2,500 Canadian museums, the VMC brings together Canada's museums regardless of size or geographical location. •
Virtual Museum of Modern Nigerian Art is the VMMNA is the first of its kind in Africa. Hosted by the
Pan-African University, Lagos, Nigeria, this virtual museum offers a good view of the development of Nigerian Art over the past fifty years. •
Virtual Museum of Soviet Repression in Belarus presents recordings of audio- and video-recollections of witnesses of Soviet repression in Belarus. The museum is operated by historians and other scientists from Belarus, based on a private initiative. It started collecting materials in 2007 and has been operational since 2014. •
Western Australian Museum is a CyberMuseum using social media sites of
Twitter and
Facebook to tell the history of
Perth,
Western Australia, through photographs, videos and news feeds. • The
Fortnite Holocaust Museum, a virtual museum in the video game
Fortnite Creative dedicated to the
Holocaust, was launched in August 2023. ==Research and scholarship==