Category Archives: artomatic

The WaPo Style Section {hearts} Artomatic

“Breaking the Valentines Mold”

Artomatic and the Pink Line Project head into Day 2 of their Luck of the Draw weekend of art and music events at venues around the Navy Yard Metro in Southeast. We count on both of these groups to put on the best art parties around (yes, fine, we {heart} them). And this show seems to have it all: a photography exhibit curated by Ten Miles Square; another exhibition, “RED: St. Valentine bled for us” (with work by Tim Tate, Pat Goslee, Scott Brooks and others); and DJs and music performances every day.

Free. Tonight 6-10 p.m.; tomorrow 2-6 p.m. Half Street, between K and L streets SE. Navy Yard Metro station. For a schedule and details, visit the Pink Line Project or Artomatic.

WaPo Going Out Gurus on the art of change

I’m going back to bed for the day – will recap my Inauguration thoughts tomorrow. In the meantime, here’s what the Washington Post’s Going Out Gurus had to say about the Art of Change last night:

Playing with Fire at the Warehouse
Maybe it’s a residual high from the day’s festivities, but the mood at the Art of Change party, hosted by Artomatic and Playa del Fuego at the Warehouse, is especially jovial. Attendees are striking up conversations with any stranger standing nearby.

Like the Manifest Hope party last night, art is the main attraction here, though the “creative attire” certainly competes with the paintings on the walls. There is no shortage of sequins, purple tulle or even bunny ears. One attendee, artist Lola Lombard, even made her own Obama-inspired ball gown.

“About 48 hours ago, I decided I should make something,” she says, and the result is a painted dress featuring all kinds of Americana from the Statue of Liberty to the Capitol to the faces of Lincoln and our newly sworn-in president.

Meanwhile, down the street in a heated tent, the party continues as people groove to Prince (in skin-tight leopard print, no less). And outside the tent’s opaque plastic windows, things are heating up. Fire performers fling flaming sticks and turn in circles while blazing hula hoops orbit their necks.

In the venue next door, a stage of rotating performances finds Victoria Vixen performing her burlesque show to “Whatever Lola Wants.” She finishes her routine — stripped down to red fishnets and a matching corset — and the crowd still screams for more. Instead, they get a couple of party attendees on stage answering one simple question: what would you want to tell President Obama if you could?

“That he should go over to the tent and see the fire people,” one woman insists. Her friend has another message in mind, one that seems to fit with the especially friendly atmosphere here:

“Sir, you are a hottie.”

I took some pictures and I’m sure lots more will be popping up on flickr. Thanks to the whole Art of Change crew for all the hard work, the party was a crazy success!

Announcing the Art of Change – January 20, 2009

This just landed in my inbox:

Artomatic and Playa del Fuego are excited to announce

The Art of Change :
An Inaugural Celebration
of DC’s Creative Communities

Downtown DC, January 20, 2009, 8 pm until … ?

Save the date (because there’s nowhere you’ld rather be on a
Tuesday night!), and look for full details this Friday, January 2nd!

The website is at artists-ball.org and will have all the details as they emerge.

Artomatic + Keith Olbermann – a (non)Friday (non)Five

I was putting together this week’s Friday Five when I realized that I didn’t have five fun links bookmarked from the weeks surfing. Also, it’s no longer Friday. In lieu of that, here’s something that struck me as funny this week as I’ve been restoring my blog archives once and (knock on wood) for all.

I forgot that Artomatic made an appearance on Countdown in 2004! In the Oddball segment, of course.

My first vaguely obsessive post about Countdown with Keith Olbermann was in April 2003, but the funniest (Olbermann-related post) is this one from July 2004 where I whine about why no one else seems to want to watch it with me:

In terms of Actual Serious news I think Countdown is the clear winner, although I’m still trying to find another person (besides Husband) who watches it. It’s not that they haven’t heard of it, they just dismiss Olbermann as a newscaster with no brains and no knowledge of politics and world affairs. Or, they scoff because of his tenure at FOX. I think it’s too bad, he can be pompous but it’s still a decent show. Guess I’ll just enjoy it while it lasts.

I thought it was funny, anyway. Not that my first post about the show was any kind of deep critique:

I can’t be the only one watching MSNBC’s Countdown with Keith Olbermann, can I? It’s a really good news show. And Olbermann is a snappy dresser. Hey, if we’re going to hold female news anchors to a certain standard it’s only fair to apply it to the men, right? Keith can rock the pinstripes. That’s a risky look on television, without some height it’s easy to end up looking like Lou Costello.

Hey, I still think he’s a snappy dresser…

artomatic

Washington Post’s Michael O’Sullivan thinks you should put “participate in Artomatic” on your list of New Year’s Resolutions.

So you’re looking to show your art somewhere, and you haven’t a clue where to begin.

I have one word for you: Artomatic.

Is that even a word? It is now. After 10 years in operation, the open-to-all-comers art institution (which began life in 1999 in a former laundry, hence the name) is expected to return next summer to the neighborhood near Nationals Park.

How many eyeballs can you reliably count on to see your work during the show? According to Artomatic honcho George Koch, a whopping 52,500 people visited this year’s roundup of roughly 800 area visual artists in the NoMa, or north of Massachusetts Avenue, neighborhood in Northeast. Like that one, the 2009 show should also include live bands, along with a host of other performances.

The criteria for entry are easy: Scrape together one C-note, give or take (the exact registration fee is to be determined). Other than that, there’s no aesthetic gatekeeper. Which means that, yes, you’ll be hanging with the sublime and the ridiculous.

Still, there is no better way to shake off the studio cobwebs and get your work out there.

If you don’t want to show your art you can always volunteer, you know.