The College of Performance, Visualization and Fine Arts at Texas A&M University is excited to invite applications for its New Work Development Artist Residency program. The college is committed to inspiring our campus and community by incubating new works of art in an environment of creative reciprocity between scholars and artists that crosses, blurs and erases disciplinary lines.
HOW IT WORKS
While this is a development residency, artists in residence will be expected to integrate their work into the life of the college, providing opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students to take part in their creative process and engaging with faculty and the wider campus community throughout the residency period. This program is designed to be mutually beneficial to the artist in residence and our students, providing the latter a high-impact educational opportunity to be present at and contribute to the creative work of the former.
EXPECTATIONS
Our New Work Development Artist Residency provides artists the opportunity to live and work outside of their usual environments, to explore and reflect, conduct research and network with artists and scholars, and develop a new work or body of works. The duration of the award is nine weeks, tentatively Aug. 4 to Oct. 4, 2026.
As a Tier 1 research institution, Texas A&M is committed to forging new paths in creative research, and the work of the artist in residence should reflect a compelling portfolio of arts practice as research. The artist in residence will be expected to spend the bulk of the residency developing a new work or body of works. The artist will be responsible for the ideation/design and execution/manufacture of their work. In addition, the artist in residence will be immersed in the life of the college and will develop opportunities for students and faculty to engage with their creative practice. Such engagement could include:
Open studios and open rehearsals.
Class visits, artist talks and workshops.
Collaborations with faculty and students.
Other forms of curricular and co-curricular integration.
The artist in residence will report to James R. Ball III, associate dean for industry and community engagement, and they will attend regular Artist and Scholar in Residence Committee meetings (once per month). Social engagements with the campus community will also take place.
At the end of the program, the artist in residence will publicly present what they have accomplished during the residency. Future exhibitions and presentations of the work should also indicate that it was developed in residence at the College of Performance, Visualization and Fine Arts at Texas A&M University.
TIMELINE