April 2026 Opportunities: Open Calls, Residencies, and Grants for Artists

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April 2026 Opportunities: Open Calls, Residencies, and Grants for Artists
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Part 2
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Part 1 here
Thank you @satelliteloooveeee for the links
I got a National Park Service Residency in Kansas!
Last year, I did my first artist residency, frequently panicked that it would be my last. Because who wants to accept someone into a program if their focus is dead animals?
Well, shockingly, I have three upcoming residencies in NPS-related naturey places for my dead-animal projects! I'll be in Badlands National Park for 6 weeks in March/April and then Tallgrass Prairie National Reserve for 10 days in April. (It's part of NPS, though its a Reserve, rather than a National Park.)
I've also been asking around and it seems like there are lots of cool potential things to do/people to meet/carcasses to photograph in Kansas!
Why Pop’s Biggest Stars Are Staying Put for Long Residencies
New York Times by Ben Sisario
On Saturday, Harry Styles will take the stage at Madison Square Garden as part of the tour for his chart-topping new album, “Harry’s House.”
Then, next Sunday, he will play the Garden again. Next Monday, too. And another 12 times through Sept. 21. At the Kia Forum in Inglewood, Calif., Styles will perform another 15 times in October and November. The entire North American leg of the singer’s latest tour, which opened in Toronto this week, consists of 42 shows in just five cities.
Styles’s tour is the most prominent example of a bubbling trend of concert residencies: extended runs by artists in a limited number of cities and venues. In a rebounding touring market, with concert-starved audiences buying tickets in record numbers — and at higher prices than ever — these bookings are deliberate choices by prominent artists to reduce their time on the road and set up shop in far fewer places than they could on a traditional tour.
Hello! It's been a long time since I posted here!
I spent the first half of the year working on a new artist's book, Things We Carried Into Space. I was given the opportunity to spend a week at the In Cahoots Residency in August, where I printed 300 + and partially bound an edition of 22 books! I'm currently working on binding the entire edition, which will then be available for sale to collectors and special collections.
This weekend I'll be posting process pictures and pictures from the residency. You can get more up-to-date posts on my instagram @jodytakesaphoto
STUDIO VISIT: BHARTI KHER
During Arthaus’ last meeting, we visited Bharti Kher, artist in residence at Hauser and Wirth Somerset. We were able to discuss her work with her, and view some of the pieces she has been creating whilst working there.
Bharti talked of her different experiences of making art in Delhi versus making art in Somerset. She explained that in Delhi she would work on many projects simultaneously, whereas in Somerset she could really focus on one project, working purely from her own head.
Bharti Kher also described how her main influences have been the ritualistic tendencies in humans, especially women, as well as Buddhism, and therefore a common theme in her work has been the body and its cycles in everyday life.
Bharti showed us the drawings she had been working on and explained how she has a strong interest in energy and space and that she saw many of the drawings as a potential for sculpture. She mentioned how she has always enjoyed experimenting with a large range of materials and isn’t too precious when making her work. She rarely plans her pieces, and doesn’t often use expensive paper preferring to use simple or found materials, and Bharti spoke about how a great amount of her work was assembled from found objects she has collected over the years.
She described the process of putting together her recent exhibition from her initial concepts to the outcomes, and the way in which she revised her ideas as her work progressed.
A big thankyou to Bharti for a fascinating evening, sharing her time and knowledge with the Arthaus group.