Artomatic is a five-week, multimedia arts event held in the Washington, D.C. area. It has been held in 1999, 2000, 2002, 2004, 2007, 2008 and 2009. The most recent Artomatic was held May 29 through July 5, 2009, on nine floors at 55 M Street, SE, Washington, D.C., adjacent to the Navy Yard – Ballpark Metro station.[1][2]
An independently organized and licensed Artomatic event was organized in Frederick, Maryland for 2011. From Sept. 28th – Nov. 6th, 2011, the former FCPS Central Office building at 115 E. Church Street, Frederick, Maryland is hosting Artomatic@Frederick.
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A steering committee comprising local artists, arts administrators, and community activists develops outreach procedures and participation guidelines to ensure the broadest possible artistic representation from the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area. Each participant pays a nominal fee and commits to volunteering for 15 hours. Most participants, however, give much more of their time; volunteers execute every task, from hauling trash and building exhibit structures to maintaining the website. As a result, the show draws artists and visitors of different races, cultural backgrounds, ages and experience levels.
Artomatic provides a mechanism for emerging and established artists to have the chance to work with and learn from one another. The diversity of artwork and performances attract a broad range of people, providing a forum to build institutional connections; linking public and private schools, universities, community development organizations, human service organizations, corporations, foundations, and cultural organizations.
Artomatic has a website Artomatic.org which is updated for each event. Additional networking occurs during and between events on a dedicated section of the artdc.org forum.
The first Art-O-Matic, as it was spelled then, ran from May 21 to June 19, 1999.[3] It started as a fairly spontaneous event in the Manhattan Laundry buildings on Florida Avenue in Northwest Washington. The location, in an old laundromat, accounts for the name.
The second Art-O-Matic was held from September 29 to October 28, 2000.[4][5] This time, it was held in the Tenleytown neighborhood of Northwest Washington, in a then-vacant building that had at various times been a Sears and a Hechinger (the building now houses a Container Store and a Best Buy).
October 31 to November 30, 2002 saw the third Art-O-Matic,[6] in a former EPA building at 401 M Street, Southwest Washington, adjacent to Waterside Mall (the mall was later demolished). At this Art-O-Matic, for the first time, the Figure Models Guild of the Washington, DC area sponsored open life drawing events. There would be live, often nude, models posing, and artists drawing. The art-going public – duly warned by signs as to the presence of live nude models – were welcome to come in and try their hand at drawing, or just observe.
The fourth Artomatic, as it was now spelled and has been spelled since, was held from November 12 through December 5, 2004[7] at the old Capital Children's Museum in Northeast Washington, a little north of Union Station. The complex has since been demolished.
There was a short hiatus after the fourth Artomatic. When Artomatic did not happen in 2006, two years after the fourth, a group of art galleries in Bethesda, Maryland put on a coordinated show of artists who might have taken part in Artomatic. The galleries mounted the art for their monthly Bethesda Art Walk (held on the second Friday of each month)[8] of January 12, 2007.[9] Whereas every other Artomatic has been open basically to any artist who has art to hang or mount and the $60 fee, this is the only time an Artomatic event was in any way curated.
Soon after this small Artomatic event, the fifth Artomatic was held from April 13 to May 20, 2007.[10] This was the first time Artomatic was held outside the District of Columbia. It occupied two floors of a vacated office building in Crystal City in Arlington, Virginia. The space had previously been occupied by the Patent and Trademark Office.
Artomatic returned to the District of Columbia with the sixth, held from May 9 through June 15, 2008.[11] This time, they occupied 10 floors of Capitol Plaza I, a new – not yet completed – office building in the NoMa (North of Massachusetts Avenue) neighborhood of Northeast Washington, a block from the New York Ave. - Florida Ave. - Gallaudet U Metro Station (soon to be renamed NoMa – Gallaudet University).
In February 2009, Artomatic collaborated with the Pink Line Project for "Luck of the Draw: An Art and Music Experience". This event attracted over 1,500 people and was held at the Capitol Riverfront Neighborhood.
The seventh Artomatic was also the tenth anniversary event. It ran from May 29 to July 5, 2009[12] in Southeast Washington. Again, it occupied a brand new building, 55 M St. SE, in a development near the new Washington Nationals ballpark located right over an entrance of the Navy Yard – Ballpark Metro Station. Over 76,000 visitors attended.