By clicking "Start Submission", you agree to be contacted by the host regarding this opportunity.
By clicking "Start Submission", you agree to be contacted by the host regarding this opportunity.
Penumbra Foundation is a NYC-based nonprofit arts organization committed to promoting a broad understanding of the contemporary photographic medium. We support a diverse community of artists, researchers, and curators through education, artist residencies, exhibitions, and a lecture series.
Our two residencies, the Workspace A-I-R Program and Risograph Publication Residency, empower artists working with the photographic medium to take risks in their practice and create boundary-pushing work.
The Penumbra Workspace A-I-R Program benefits emerging artists with access to time, facilities, critical and technical support, and honoraria. The extension of the program is six to eight weeks depending on the time requested by the selected artists. Participants have liberal access to our comprehensive facilities and are expected to use their time to pursue their own projects: researching, photographing, scanning, printing, working on an exhibition or editing a book. Artists will have opportunities for community engagement such as teaching, giving a talk, hosting an open studio, or developing an exhibition, as determined by the Directors and staff.
The Penumbra Risograph Publication Residency provides the opportunity for artists to propose a photographic project to produce in print form, at our Risograph facilities in New York City. Artists receive resources, assistance, and time for the production of a small edition risograph photobook project. A basic overview of the operation and use of the ME9450 Risograph is provided - no prior risograph printing experience is required. Residents are allotted roughly one month to produce their projects in June, July, or August of 2025. Penumbra Foundation will assist in the distribution and promotion of the projects, with the residency concluding with a book launch in September, 2025.
The juries consist of a rotating panel of arts professionals that changes each year. These committees are separate and specific to the residency programs they are reviewing for. Applications should demonstrate creativity and coherence in the artist's vision.
Applicants should clearly describe their interest in the residency they are applying for in their Letter of Intent. Workspace applicants are to provide a summary of their intended activities. Risograph residents must articulate why their project is well suited to be reproduced in the risograph process.