Application deadline: November 26, 2018
209 East 23rd Street
New York, New York 10010
United States
Funded residency with SVA Art Practice in NYC
MFA Art Practice at the School of Visual Arts invites emerging and mid-career artists working in all disciplines to apply for the Art Practice Artist-in-Residence program. One artist will be selected to be the artist-in-residence for the duration of the Art Practice program’s summer semester. The residency period will be June 12–July 31, 2019. The artist-in-residence will receive a studio, access to the facilities, including the Metal Shop, Wood Shop, Digital Sculpture Center, Digital Editing Lab, Fibers Lab, Ceramics Lab and Nature and Technology Lab, and a 5000 USD stipend. Additionally, the Artist-in-Residence will give a public artist talk on Tuesday, July 2. They are expected to engage with the SVA Art Practice community, participate in weekly group critiques, and develop a project with first-year MFA candidates in the program, which will culminate in a public presentation (exhibition, screening, performance, book launch, etc.) during Open Studios on July 24.
We are committed to building a culturally and artistically diverse community and encourage applications from artists working in all media and representing all identities.
Applications are due by November 26. Detailed application requirements and residency responsibilities can be found here.
About SVA Art Practice
The Art Practice program at SVA is a low-residency, interdisciplinary graduate program. A carefully selected, small group of candidates comes together at SVA’s NYC campus for three successive, intensive summer residency periods. In the intervening fall and spring semesters, students engage in required, rich-media online coursework from all over the world. Participants combine personal narrative with critical theory to create works that comment on social issues.
MFA Art Practice aims to facilitate a global conversation about the arts. Ultimately, the program aims to foster an atmosphere of risk-taking and experimentation, and to create a community of artists and culture producers who look beyond a consensus driven approach to how we define what’s important in contemporary art.