Res Artis

Res Artis was founded in 1993, a website and the largest existing network of artist residency programs,[1] representing the interests of more than 600 centers, organisations, and individuals in over 70 countries worldwide.

History

Founded in 1993 in Berlin, Germany, through the volunteer efforts of the Board of Directors and countless partners and friends, Res Artis has grown to become the largest network of its kind, promoting the role of residential art programs as a vital part of the contemporary arts world, stimulating the creative development and mobility of artists, and furthering intercultural understanding. Res Artis founding members include Michael Haerdter and William Edward Smart Jr. (1933–2019).[2][3]

Each of Res Artis' members is dedicated to offering artists, curators, and all manner of creative people the essential time and place away from the pressures and habits of every-day life, an experience framed within a unique geographic and cultural context. Through Res Artis, organisations will become part of a global community of colleagues engaged in dialogue through face-to-face meetings and virtually through an extensive online presence.

Members of the organisation include a wide variety of facilities that take may take the form of an art colony, an artist-run space, or other regional residency networks.

The network began in 1993 as an organisation of volunteers who represent and support the needs of residential arts centers and programs through the dynamic exchange of information in the form of publications and through regional and international face-to-face meetings. Res Artis promotes the understanding of the catalytic role residential arts centers play in the development of Contemporary Arts in all cultures worldwide and across all creative media. The organization has been cited in its work to further the international mobility of artists and the promotion of cultural exchange through art residencies.[2][4]

Conferences and meetings

The heart of the network are face-to-face meetings. They provide opportunities for our members to meet, discuss, and learn first-hand about the host location. These are venues for sharing experiences, ideas, and meals, getting to know one another not only as colleagues but as people.

These meetings are organised in partnership with a Res Artis member, a local residency space, or other organisation. Res Artis meetings can focus on a particular theme, issue, profile or geographic region.

gollark: Also, did you consider websockets instead of some weird HTTP polling?
gollark: <@426660245738356738> Can you share the code for the HTTP server this presumably connects to?
gollark: Still, I think that trying to use CC without programming anything... kind of defeats the point of using CC.
gollark: Well, that seems somewhat more useful than other OSes I guess?
gollark: It's not tied into THOR though.

See also

References

  1. Peard, Alexandra (2019-03-20). "How to Turn Your Vacation into an Artistic Retreat". Artsy. Retrieved 2019-09-25.
  2. Pellapaisiotis, Haris. "Speaking Thoughts: On an Art School" (PDF). byanalogy.org. Retrieved 2019-09-24. Michael Haerdter, who addressed mobility in the context of artist residencies as in the work of Künstlerhaus Bethanien in Berlin and Res Artis—International Association of Residential Art;
  3. "Sweet Briar community mourns loss of former English professor, VCCA director William Smart". Sweet Briar College. 2019. Retrieved 2019-09-25.
  4. Ya-ping Chen, (2006) "Habitus and Nomadism: A Study of Programs-Exploring of Artists-in-Residence and International Mobility", Language: Chinese
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