Celebrating 78 Years of the BAM Arts Fair

June 28, 2024
Culture
Celebrating 78 Years of Crafting Community in Bellevue

Crafting Community in Bellevue since 1947

The Bellevue Collection is proud to host the Bellevue Arts Museum Arts Fair along our West Drive July 26-28, 2024. From its debut as an arts and crafts fair to its current title as the largest award-winning arts and crafts festival in the Northwest, the BAM Arts Fair is nothing short of a Pacific Northwest institution.

The madrona tree outside of Carl Pefley's Crabapple restaurant.
The madrona tree outside of Carl Pefley’s Crabapple restaurant.

In 1947, the same year Jackie Robinson joined the MLB and the first airplane broke the sound barrier, restaurateur Carl Pefley approached Kemper Freeman, Sr. with an idea for an outdoor art exhibit. The process of choosing art to hang in the Crabapple restaurant put him in constant contact with artists looking to display their work, and it was interfering with time he wanted to spend on the restaurant. He suggested that the iconic madrona tree outside the Crabapple could serve as a central location for an annual exhibition.

Bellevue Shopping Square was a new addition to the town of Bellevue, which wouldn’t be incorporated until 1953. The Lake Washington floating bridge would not connect the community to Seattle until 1949, and it was considered a rural bedroom community at the time, rather than a hub for art. Even still, Pefley and Freeman, Sr. hosted the first fair at Bellevue Shopping Square to rave reviews. The autumn event garnered the participation of 70 local and regional artists and four times that amount of artwork. Despite inclement weather, including several intermittent downpours, the fair was attended by nearly 30,000 people.

The fair’s success inspired the Freemans, Pefley, and a handful of volunteers to form the Pacific Northwest Arts and Crafts Association (PANACA) with the mission to enhance, educate, and inspire artists around the region. Knowing the fair would be more enjoyable in better weather, Freeman Sr. did his research and moved the now-annual fair to the last weekend of July, when rain is consistently the least likely.

The modern Arts Fair is a celebration of artists and creativity throughout the entire Pacific Northwest.

Over the years, Bellevue grew, changed, and flourished, and so did Bellevue Square. In 1961, PANACA opened their own gallery inside Bellevue Square to promote artists year-round. By 1983, PANACA’s School of Art, which had a store in Bellevue Square, grew from a few individuals in a little red schoolhouse to a full-fledged museum. The Bellevue Arts Museum opened that year on the third floor of Bellevue Square. And, each year, thousands of guests journeyed to enjoy the art, food, and culture Pacific Northwest artists brought to the fair.

The Bellevue Arts Museum now sits in its own space on Bellevue Way, and as Bellevue Square celebrates the end of its 78th year in Bellevue, BAM celebrates as many years of fostering, encouraging and engaging the Eastside’s artistic community through the Arts Fair. The Bellevue Collection is proud to sponsor their creative endeavors and support them as they engage and enrich the community. Visit Bellevue Square’s West Drive from July 26-28 to view and shop the works of over 300 artists juried by the Bellevue Arts Museum, see live performances at the BAMboozle stage at Fountain Court, and enjoy free admission to the Bellevue Arts Museum.

Learn more about the Arts Fair here.

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