Sunday, May 20, 2012

WTOP on Artomatic

WTOP has a photo spread on AOM; check it out here.

James Renwick Alliance 
Recognition of Excellence 
ARTOMATIC 2012 
Artist 
Work 
Type 
Floor 
Location 
Brad Taylor 
Chaise 
Wood and Metal Furniture 
8 
305 
David D’Orio 
Installation 
Mixed Media (Glass) 
8 
147 
Donna McCullough 
Body of Work 
Metal Sculpture 
1 
152 
Helen Baribeau 
Body of Work 
Fiber Sculpture 
4 
121 
Julia Bloom 
Installation 
Wood Sculpture 
7 
208 
Matt MacIntire 
Body of Work 
Mixed Media 
9 
160 
Michael Janis 
Body of Work 
Glass 
2 
173 
Pierre Davis 
Body of Work 
Wood Sculpture 
10 
152 
Sean Hennessey 
Body of Work 
Glass 
9 
141 
Zofie Lang 
Installation 
Mixed Media 
9 
112 

Saturday, May 19, 2012

Tim Tate: Artomatic Top 10 List

Uberartist Tim Tate, in my biased opinion the DMV's best-known artist, sends in his top 10 choices in this year's Artomatic, which opened last night with a monster of a party in Crystal City. Here are his choices:

1) helen baribeau

2) nils henrik sundquist

3) dave d'orio 

4) drew storm graham

5) kelly guerrero

6) zofie lang

7) justin cameron

8) matt macintire

9) sean hennessey

10) melissa burley


Tim Tate
Co-Director
Washington Glass School
3700 Otis St.
Mt. Rainier, Md. 20712
202-744-8222

Today --- In the Mix: DC Area Abstract Artists

In the Mix: DC Area Abstract Artists

  A special gallery opening

Saturday, May 19, 2012
3:00 – 5:00 pm  


The Gallery @ Children’s National Medical Center
111 Michigan Avenue, NW

Washington, DC 20010


Exhibition on View
May 7 - July 6, 2012

a group exhibition featuring the works of internationally & nationally known artists:
Joan Belmar, Anne Bouie, Elsa Gebreyesus, Wayson Jones
Anne Marchand, Tariq Tucker,
Ann Marie Williams and J. Bertram White

Curator: Jarvis DuBois
"Not too unlike a DJ's “digging in the crates” to pull together seemingly disparate musical styles and sound effects, many contemporary artists mine various mediums for their individual art production. This exhibition explores the creative drives and experimentation of mixed media abstract artists from DC, Maryland and Virginia who have often chosen to combine untraditional painting and assemblage materials (acetate, plant pods, metal components, pumice) with more straightforward acrylics, pastels, and oils to create their both energetic and powerful visual "mashups". As curator one of my goals is to expand the understanding of what abstraction is and can be as expressed by these eight artists."   
 – Jarvis DuBois

Gallery Hours: Monday – Friday
10:00 am – 5:00 pm
For more information, call 202.476.3225
PHOTO ID REQUIRED

Visit the web site for more information and directions: www.childrensnational.org

Friday, May 18, 2012

The WaPo on Artomatic

The WaPo has a gorgeous photo essay on Artomatic... check it out online here.

Brandon Wetherbee on Artomatic

"The 2012 iteration of Artomatic is the largest to date, with more than 1,100 artists participating. That number will increase with each day of the monthly installation. The sixth floor of the building will be an "Art Reactor," a space where visitors will be able to create their own art with supplies provided by the space."
Read the whole piece on the HuffPost here.

John Anderson on Artomatic

"Walk through Artomatic for two hours and the effect is what you might expect: It's dizzying. Draining. Eleven floors, 10 of them busting with artworks from 1,300 contributors. Some floors are labyrinthine; others are wide-open displays of sculpture and installation, interrupted by a stage and bank of chairs. Like the last time Artomatic was in Crystal City, this year's show is housed in an old office building. The carpet looks cheap; the drop ceiling feels cheaper. The lighting is mostly fluorescent. It is everything a museum or a gallery shouldn't be. And that's the point, because it is neither.

Consider what it is: a six-week event by local artists for local artists, run almost entirely by volunteers in a vacant building. There are the stages: poetry on the 11th floor; Heineken (one of the sponsors) has stages on the 10th and eighth floors; the ninth floor has a dance stage. If it isn't the largest volunteer-run arts organization in the country, it's probably near the top"
Read the whole article in the WCP here.