No Smoking, Please
But maybe you'd like to buy some art?
兔子先生传媒文化作品 is, officially, a smokefree campus, and has been for years: No smoking permitted, indoors or out.
So, the appearance this year of a cigarette vending machine in the north entry of the CU Museum of Natural History has prompted some delighted double-takes.
A mid-century model last on duty in a New York jewelry store, the dispenser today serves a salutary role: It鈥檚 an Art-o-mat. Instead of Marlboros or Camels or Virginia Slims, it offers original artworks at $5 per.
鈥淲e wanted to provide something new and different in the museum that would bridge the gap between art and science,鈥 said Samantha Eads, the museum鈥檚 visitor services manager, who pursued an Art-o-mat after first seeing one in Indianapolis in 2015.
The hope, she said, is for visitors to leave with a happy token of their experience that inspires a return.
Eads stocks the Art-o-mat with oil paintings, watercolors, jewelry, sculpture and fabrics with animal, plant and other natural history themes or forms. A North Carolina-based artists鈥 coop, Artists in Cellophane, provides the art. The Art-omats come from an affiliated nonprofit.
鈥淲e鈥檙e always looking for new ways to pique students鈥 interest in natural history,鈥 she said.
There are about 100 Arto-mats around the country, according to artomat.org, many in museums and arts centers, but also in libraries, hotels, restaurants and stores. They鈥檝e been spotted in Whole Foods.
CU鈥檚 mirrored model, a smooth, metallic specimen, rust-colored and replete with pull-knobs, previously served up art in Manhattan. After a touchup, it was shipped to Boulder.
鈥淭here are many styles of Art-omats, as there were many styles of cigarette dispensers,鈥 said Eads. 鈥淭he feel of this one just seemed to fit with the rest of the museum.鈥
Sales help support students in the museum鈥檚 Museum and Field Study program, and the artwork is easy to carry away 鈥 each measures 54mm by 82mm by 21mm, about the size of a pack of cigarettes.
Photos by Glenn Asakawa