You are a member of Res Artis
View this email in your browser

Res Artis Members Newsletter,  February 2025
 
 Image: Res Artis and FAAP, Save the date poster.

Save the Date
 2025 Res Artis Conference, São Paulo, Brazil


Other Springs: Blooms from the Global South
18 – 23 September 2025


Dear Res Artis Community,

For the first time in our 32-year history, Res Artis will host our annual conference in Latin America! Titled Other Springs: Blooms from the Global South, the 2025 event will be hosted by long-standing Res Artis Member Fundação Armando Alvares Penteado (FAAP) and held in São Paulo, Brazil from 18 - 23 September. The conference marks the 20th anniversary of the Residẽncia Artistica FAAP - São Paulo arts resdiency and will coincide with the 36th Bineal de São Paulo and France in Brazil Season which celebrates 200 years of diplomatic relations.

Motivated by the title of the book Primavera para as Rosas Negras: Lélia Gonzalez em Primeira Pessoa (2018), the conference will offer unique perspectives from the Global South guided by the concept of ‘amefricanity’. The program will emphasise the significance of Indigenous and African presence in shaping the cultural and social landscape of Brazil and wider Latin America today, including how the structure and practices of art residencies in the region reflect this rich heritage.

Drawing on the ethos of FAAP as an educational and artistic institution we will also reflect on the theme of education in the arts residencies field. Using case studies from the region and abroad, the event will examine how artists can combine research, access to collections and exchange; the contributions of public institutions in hosting arts residencies; and the crucial educational role that arts residencies play in an artist’s career trajectory.

Stay tuned to our website for further details, early-bird registrations and announcements.

 
VIEW ALL OPEN CALLS
Honorary Board Member Annoucement - Lea O'Loughlin
Res Artis is delighted to announce Lea O’Loughlin (UK) as an Honorary Board Member of Res Artis. Lea joined the Res Artis Stichting Board in 2014 before becoming Secretary in 2015; Vice-President in 2016; then President from 2018-2022. In 2021 Lea became the inaugural Chair of our new Australian headquarters, Res Artis Limited, and served in that role until 2023. Lea oversaw many achievements during her tenure with Res Artis including helping the organisation navigate the Covid-19 pandemic. Lea O'Loughlin is currently Co-Director of Acme, who hosted the 2023 Res Artis conference titled Mind the gap: designing residencies for everyone.
 
Acme are the largest provider of permanent affordable artist studios in England supporting over 800 artists in London annually. Alongside studio provision Acme's targeted programme of artist support, including residencies and awards, are designed to have transformational impact. Over 700 international artists have benefitted from these programmes since 1987. Lea has held various roles at Adelaide Central Gallery, The Museum of Modern Art (New York), The Royal British Society of Sculptors, The Florence Trust, Tate, Gasworks Gallery & Studios and Cubitt Artists’ Studios. Lea currently sits on the steering group for Contemporary Visual Arts Network (CVAN) London, is a member of On the Move, and regularly contributes to research, advocacy and evaluation projects. 
Spotlight Series - Davor Abazovic
 
Davor Abazovic is the producer for Art Inside Out, the nomadic institution for artistic residenciessituated in Halland County in southwest Sweden. He works on residency development and realization, curating exhibitions and program activities, and serving as editor of the publication AIO Journal. His past experience includes managing projects at different film festivals, being a freelance writer, and teaching in the fields of television and film production, and art studies. He’s a former musician, who holds a Master’s degree in Film Studies and B.A. degrees in Comparative Literature and Pedagogy.

 

1. What is the most challenging aspect of your work at the moment?

(Sweden) Art Inside Out is run as a collaboration between Halland County and its six municipalities. On one hand, that gives us the opportunity to operate in a rather vast geographic area and exciting sites. On the other hand, the municipalities are run by their own governments and politics, and their funding of arts and culture is even more limited now. So, even if all our thematic residencies are site-specific and tailor-made, and the county covers most of the costs, we need to look for more elaborate ways to get a job done in this new reality.Some of the strategies are both finding new alliances and increasing established collaborations with actors who can offer various support that is not ncessarily financial.But also inviting artists to our residencies who can produce work and ideas that are multilayered and can appeal to different audiences.

2. What are you working on now that has got you excited?

“In the Wave of the Waves” is the residency that we are conducting this spring and summer, in relation to the World Heritage Grimeton Radio Station.The residency explores the possibilities and limits of translation as well as its inconsistencies, dissonances and resistence. What happens when language, matter and identities are transferred from one context to another? What is gained and what is lost when boundary lines are crossed? The artists Einat Amir and Eric Magassa are using this heritage site as a springboard for excavations of historical and contemporary events which opens up for philosophical and existential reflections, about geopolitics, everyday life and everything in between. I’m really excited about the process that we’re just starting up with these two artists and I’m looking very much forward to working with them.

3. What do you wish you knew when you first started in this position?

Since I’ve been holding this position for almost ten years now, it’s a bit hard to go back to that very moment. Moreover, this type of nomadic residency institution, without fixed place or facilities, that is constantly moving, adapting and reinventing itself, was just launched when I came aboard and it was something rather unique in Sweden (and in many ways it still is). And even if we knew what we wanted to achieve, there were no guarantees for anything. Also now, being a well-established and renowned art institution, there is no way to tell for how long it will last. So perhaps, more of an insight after all these years than “I wish I knew back then”, but in order to survive and thrive in this sector you really need to stay relevant and true to what you believe in.

4. Looking at the field of art residencies in your region, what do you think is the most pressing issue?

Funding is probably the most pressing issue, not only for the smaller artist-run residency, but also for bigger institutions. There are a lot of great initiatives, both locally and nationally, but we have seen severe cutbacks in government funding of arts and culture - which is of course not limited to Sweden. The tradition of private funders is still not so established in Sweden, although it is what our current government is favoring, so it brings some insecurity also to the field of art residencies. Of course, to build up a more robust field we need to have different types of funding, and artist-run residencies are de facto often funded by the artist themselves – via side jobs or such. But we are definitely in some sort of shift now, that is also questioning the ways artistic work ( and all that surrounds it) should be paid for.

5. What are you reading (or watching/listening to) at the moment?

There are two rather distinct books that I’m reading now. One is “Art Rings”, by Maria Lind, perhaps the most renowned Swedish curator today, who uses twenty art pieces to discuss contemporary art as a form of understanding. The other one is “Ottoman Empire” by the historian Dick Harrison, which is a bit more truthful and multilayered account of this phenomenon.

 
SHOUT OUT TO NVAIR
Image: Photograph arts residency NVAIR.
 
Res Artis Member, Nazar Voitovich Artist in Residence (NVAIR), is an inspiring example of resilience and determination to continue forging connections and opportunities in the most difficult of circumstances that we think is worth sharing.

Located just outside Ternopil, NVAIR and their affiliated NGO, the Congress of Cultural Activits (CCA), served as an art shelter for six months since the onset of the full-scale war in Ukraine. They established a ‘forced’ art residency programme and even launched a new project called Internal Elements. For a period, the residency was closed due to blackouts across the country. But in 2023, they transformed their premises into an art studio for local children while also acquiring equipment to ensure electricity and communication during emergencies. They partnered on two projects: hosting a short hybrid residency initiated by literature professors from the USA and Romania, alongside Ukrainian writers and artists online, and a two-month residency programme for Ukrainian artists supported by Artists at Risk (Finland).

In 2024, NVAIR became a partner on a national research project for an architectural-artistic residency, KUT 772, focussing on empowering communities in the post-war reconstruction phase. And further, the Congress of Cultural Activists (CCA) became partners in a cross-European project OASiS (Open Art Spaces in Synergy), aimed at building a network of free and open creative spaces throughout Europe through art residency programmes. Though they are unable to fully participate as a residency due to the ongoing war, they nevertheless contribute in the back-end administration and through providing research around community empowerment through residencies. 
 
Bravo to Liudmyla and her team!
 
Art Show Podcast: The rise & rise of artist in residence

Amaara Raheem speaks to ABC  about the history and ideas behind the Artist-in-Residence. Amaara Raheem is a dancer, researcher, educator and writer.

listen now

Image: Courtesy of Amaara Raheem, in-residence Burrard Marina Fieldhouse, Vancouver, 2016
Resource: Creatives At Risk
Led by immigration and human rights attorneys, Artistic Freedom Initiative (AFI) facilitates pro bono immigration representation and resettlement assistance for international artists who are persecuted or censored.
 

Here are some helpful links to some wonderful organisations that are directly helping  creatives at risk, including organisations that can provide immediate support and emergency residency opportunities.
 

Organisations that can offer Support:

  • Artists at Risk:ARTISTS at RISK (AR) is a non-profit network institution at the intersection of human rights and the arts. AR is dedicated to mapping the field of persecuted art practitioners, facilitating their safe passage from their countries of origin, hosting them at AR-Residencies and curating related projects. On the AR website you can find information for information for being hosted, being a host and emergency resources.
     
  • Artistic Freedom Initative:Led by immigration and human rights attorneys, Artistic Freedom Initiative (AFI) facilitates pro bono immigration representation and resettlement assistance for international artists at risk. We work with immigrant artists to champion art produced in exile, advance creative cultural exchange, improve conditions for artists in their home countries, and safeguard their ability to express themselves creatively through the arts. 
     
  • Artists at Risk Connection (ARC) safeguards the right to artistic freedom of expression and ensures that artists and cultural professionals everywhere can live and work without fear.
     
  • Artist Protection Fundworks to preserve lives, voices and ideas from around the globe.
     
  • Safe Muse is a non-profit organisation dedicated to the fight for artistic freedom. They provide persecuted artists and artists at risk a place to stay and develop their art.
     
  • Free Muse is an independent international non-governmental organisation advocating for freedom of artistic expression and cultural diversity.


You can see our website for many more organisations. If you would like to suggest a resource that can be added to this section of the website, please email [email protected]

Your feedback is important to Res Artis. If you have questions or suggestions, email our office: [email protected]

Want to see more from Res Artis? Follow us on all our platforms and stay up to date...

Follow us on Instagram!
Follow us on Facebook!
Follow us on Twitter!
Follow us on LinkedIn!
Sign up to our Public ENews!

 
Copyright © 2024 Res Artis, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you are a member of Res Artis.

Our mailing address is:
Res Artis
L1 44 Glasshouse Rd
Collingwood, Victoria 3066
Australia

Add us to your address book


Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.






This email was sent to [email protected]
why did I get this?    unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences
Res Artis · L1 44 Glasshouse Rd · Collingwood, Victoria 3066 · Australia

 ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏ ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏ ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏ ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏ ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏ ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏