Project Dispatch Delivers

Family Portrait Once out of college, most of us find it rare to receive care packages. Remember having your day brightened after treking down to mail services to retrieve a package, tearing it open with anticipation of what might be inside? But gone are the days of mystery boxes packed with love and much needed supplies from mom.

Enter Project Dispatch, an artwork subscription service that aims to reclaim a bit of that feeling. Conceived by two area Corcoran graduates, Rachel England and Chandi Kelley, the service allows subscribers to choose an artist who will send you art in the mail each month. Subscriptions are three, six or 12 months, and you can choose your payment level starting at $15 and going as high as $40 per month.

England and Kelley set out with the idea to get artists working and creating. As both attended Corcoran, England explained, the college pushes students to create small works. "That's where you make discoveries [as an artist] and where your larger work comes from," she said. And with the small monthly subscription rate, all the work is expected to be small.

Currently, 18 artists are involved in the project with plans to expand the group to 30. Over half are Corcoran graduates and many are area working artists whose body of works are quite diverse. Subscribers can find visual and digital artists, as well as musicians and poets.

There's a bit of mystery about what subscribers might receive in the mail, but that is all a part of the fun. Some artists are coming up with serial works and others a continuous story that won't be finished when a subscription ends. The advantage to the buyer is the ability to collect artwork at low cost, not to mention help get artists creating.

The regular subscription includes work from just one artist, but a sampler subscription is available, for which an artist will be chosen at random. Future plans for possible sampler customization will be based on customer and artist feedback, where you could choose different artists each month.

Artists that are involved are asked to pay a membership fee of $18 for one year and pay for shipping and handling for any subscriptions. Project Dispatch takes a 10% commission from each subscription to cover administrative costs. England said there won't be a lot of profit for the artists but that was never the main goal. The advantage to the artist is to work small, get in the studio, and be inspired.

Project Dispatch officially launches this Friday with a party and exhibit of the project artists at The Mini, an alternative space in Southeast. Each of the artists were asked to submit up to six works no larger than 12" x 12" for the show. The exhibit will be set up as a marketplace and less like a gallery show, where people can buy subscriptions right then and there and take the works off of the wall. The hope being that by the end of the evening the walls will be empty.

The Mini is located at 29 Kings Court SE and the Project Dispatch launch party and exhibit will take place from 7 p.m. to 12 a.m., Friday, October 30. Subscriptions are being accepted now.

Email This Entry


Comments (2) [rss]

if i can't get a mini mona lisa, i'm not interested!

seriously, though, this is a pretty neat idea.

This is a great idea, and I'm excited to see the list of artists so far.

Post a comment (Comment Policy)

Tips

About DCist

DCist is a website about Washington, D.C. More

Editor: Sommer Mathis Publisher: Gothamist

Twitter

Contribute

Latest Tip:

Hey, a big snowball fight is brewing for this evening, starting sometime between 8:00 and 9:00pm on
[more]

Latest Photo:

Recent Comments

Subscribe

Use an RSS reader to stay up to date with the latest news and posts from DCist.

All Our RSS