2025 Residency Program Brochure

Page 1


CRAIGARDAN 2025 Residencies

A rocky garden

Who we are, what we do

Founded in 2016 by ceramic artists, Craigardan is a nonprofit arts organization and educational working farm that leverages collective creativity for social good. We bring people together for place-based and interdisciplinary learning, providing creative residencies, courses, and events that span diverse artistic and knowledge disciplines in order to foster curiosity, inquiry, and collaboration.

Craigardan supports ceramic, literary, visual, and performance artists, as well as farmers, chefs, activists, scholars, and researchers from the Adirondack region and around the world. We cultivate a dynamic that amplifies each individual’s work and activates collective creativity within the community. We believe that fostering the interaction between artists and the local public is as important as providing sheltered time to artists to further their creative practices.

As an organization deeply rooted in this region’s unique history, Craigardan exists at the nexus of processes (re)making this region’s present and future: environmental conservation, the resurgence of small farms, rural economic revitalization, and cultural/social activism.

By developing interdependent connections within our local Adirondack community, we nurture a deep sense of place through people, culture, food, stories, and the exchange of ideas and skills. With a built-in focus on equitable exchange across a wide range of disciplines, Craigardan offers an experience that ties the creative process to larger contexts. This experience leads to new questions and new initiatives; and it generates positive social change through collective creativity.

Master Artist Fellow Michiko Theurer (’24)

Understanding place

Cultivating new soil

When we relocated Craigardan from Keene to Elizabethtown in 2019, we imagined the possibilities for expanding our international, interdisciplinary arts program and amplifying its positive exchange well beyond the borders of the Adirondacks. We are rooted in place and thinking globally.

Craigardan now stewards 320+ acres of field and forest off the flanks of Hurricane Mountain in various stages of regrowth and regeneration. In the early 1800s, Manoah Miller set out to create a homestead including a forge, sawmill, and kiln on these lands taken from the Kanienʼkehá:ka people. Not much of the Miller settlement remains, but the land continues to hold the full history of this beautiful location important to the Six Nations as a dish with one spoon. We strive to develop a deepened understanding of place, strengthen connections with our Akwesasne neighbors, and to allow this understanding to inform our collective work and to guide our path forward.

Since 2019 we have been working with a team of architects, designers, historians, conservation specialists, engineers, builders, forestry experts, and artists to plan a new campus, raise funds, secure permits, and build anew.

In 2020 we opened the original farmhouse as Craigardan’s new farm store, returning all profits to regional farmers. We began to farm the land again, and gave the food to families in need. In 2021 we built the summer studio barn, launched our Community Farm Program, and began working on the new campus site. In 2022 we re-opened the residency program with off-site housing as we continued to farm, turn skid tracks into trails, rebuild soil, recover pastures, and construct the new campus. In 2023 we opened the new main campus, and welcomed artists-in-residence to the first of many buildings to be built in phases — designed by Adirondack architect Nils Luderowski.

Collective Creativity 2025 Residency Program

2025 will mark our third season of artists and scholars living and working on the new campus. This year’s program will support more than 65 individuals working in different media, at different stages of their careers, but all with the desire and creative ability to see possibility and build community.

The beautiful, but in-process campus requires residents to be flexible, adaptive, and comfortable in a luxury-camping setting. Our smart and supportive staff is often problem-solving - and thoughtful, honest communication is the key to a successful residency at Craigardan.

In this wild, raw, quiet, and extremely rural location we see and hear wildlife, experience dark skies, embrace summer insects, and live with the ever-changing patterns of mountain weather. The Adirondacks is a place of untamed beauty and provides full immersion in nature in all her glory.

And, although construction will not be taking place during the residency season, you may occasionally see and/or hear work being done on-campus to maintain or improve spaces.

If this sounds like an exciting experience to you, we encourage you to apply!

The 2025 Residency Program At-A-Glance

• A self-directed residency program with organizational and community support

• Apply for two or more weeks in May, June, July, August, or September

• Individual live/work artist cabins in a rustic, yet comfortable and safe wilderness setting

• This is luxury camping with indoor/outdoor living as we build out the new campus.

• Scholarships, Fellowships, and Work Exchange opportunities are available to all applicants

Culinary Arts Fellow Raenel Stelly (’21)

the details

A CRAIGARDAN RESIDENCY. The program is designed to allow plenty of time for independent, yet supported work within an individual’s respective area of focus, while encouraging cross- and interdisciplinary exploration and creative dialogue.

A small amount of programmatic structure provides the framework around which residents may utilize large amounts of free time to work. Residents have the option to share knowledge and learn new skills such as cooking, pottery, farming or writing; participate in community events such as the summer Applebarn series; and engage in thoughtful discussions with staff, local experts, and program ambassadors.

In addition, opportunities for hiking, biking, local exploration, and swimming provide fresh inspiration (and sometimes necessary distraction). With two mountain streams, many miles of trails to explore, and close proximity to the heart of the Adirondack Park’s High Peaks, the Craigardan campus is an ideal location for artists and thinkers to stretch the legs and the mind in the largest state park in America. Although we are in a very remote setting, Craigardan is only 4 miles from the county seat of Elizabethtown, 6 miles from Keene and Keene Valley, and 30 minutes from Lake Placid.

This experience will provide residents with the time, support, and space to make work, collaborate, share, and grow while affording the rare opportunity to participate in a new beginning for Craigardan.

THE 2025 PROGRAM. This program is a short-term, partially-funded residency for visual artists, ceramic artists, chefs, writers, scholars, and other place-based thinkers and creatives. Individuals may apply for two or

more weeks in-residence from May through September. We will not be supporting winter residencies until the main campus construction is complete. Only 6-7 artists will be in-residence at a time for a close-knit community experience.

ACCOMMODATIONS.

Residents sleep in their own tiny Artist Cabins, designed as a very modern take on the Adirondack Lean-to. Each beautiful cabin has a bed, writing table, good lighting, outlets, heat, closet space, and a small entry porch. The cabins are located on the main campus site, 1/3 mile drive or walk into the property from the farm + farmhouse. They are situated at the top of the campus clearing next to a Bath House which has four individual full bathrooms. Residents have access to shared living space in the beautiful new

For artists working in the ceramic or visual arts, studio space will be assigned in one of our new studio barns. Writers and scholars work out of their artist cabins. It is important to discuss individual studio requirements with staff in advance. Wifi does not reach the studios.

The Farm and Farmhouse is located 1/3 mile downhill from the main campus and houses the farm store, offices, and laundry facilities. There is an office phone available to residents at all times. A printer is also available in the office for printing up to 20 pages.

Internet is available in the Farmhouse (at the farm) and in the Applebarn (on campus). Cell phone service is

Applebarn and a professional summer kitchen in the Kiln House open-air pavilion.
The individual artist cabins on the main campus.

rustic Adirondack experience that will not appeal to everyone. We will schedule a call with all applicants to be sure the program and accommodations are a good fit, and that we can meet your personal and professional needs.

FEES AND FINANCIAL AID.

The fee for a 2025 residency is $1850 per week. Applicants may choose to apply for a $850/week scholarship or a $1350/ week scholarship based on need. This brings the cost down to $1000/week or $500/week, respectively.

Individuals may also apply for Work Exchange residencies or one of our Fellowships to cover part or all of the remaining fee. Scholarships, Fellowships, and Work Exchange opportunities are competitive.

2pm and 4pm to a full orientation and community agreement with staff followed by Monday Night Dinner with delicious local food and inspired conversation.

Residents may participate in variety of hour-long program options each week. Monday Night Dinner brings staff and special local guests together with residents. Short courses generally take place on Tuesdays + Thursdays. Each Wednesday we facilitate a group crit session (critical thinking) which brings multiple perspectives together in dialogue. On Thursdays residents have the option to meet with staff — providing support while helping artists achieve individual goals. On Friday nights we open our doors to the public for our Applebarn Series where artists-inresidence showcase their work to each other and to

extreme wealth. Elizabethtown is the county seat, with many public services including an excellent mental health clinic. We also have a full hospital, dentist offices, churches, pharmacy, grocery store, hardware store, and dollar store. There are a few restaurants and car mechanics. We are also in the middle of excellent multi-use recreational trail networks. We are 1.5-2 hours from multiple airports, and 15 minutes to a train station and bus stop. There is no car service, however!

COLLECTIVE CREATIVITY.

We are here to support you and your work, but also to respond to and grow from all that you bring to Craigardan. Each resident’s time, knowledge, and insight will help to inform this place and the future of Craigardan; planting the seeds for change and growth.

The new, universally accessible campus, designed by architect Nils Luderowski, will be built in phases over time. L to R: Home, Main House, Studio, and Kiln House. Not shown: Applebarn
TOP L: Our herd of Tunis sheep RIGHT: The new Kiln House + Wood Kiln under construction in 2023, BOTTOM L: the Farmhouse Farm Store

the experience

THE MAGIC IS IN THE PEOPLE. Quotes from some of our 2023 + 2024 artists and scholars-in residence:

“It is such an incredible gift that I will be unpacking for years to come.” - Marlena M.

“Craigardan is a holy place. Amongst the wisdom of the trees and held in community, amazing work happened for me both in my artistic devotion and in my personal life. I cannot say enough about this life-changing experience and place.” - Christie Gardiner

“A Craigardan residency is one of the best things I have done in my life.” - Mia Vodanovich

“Craigardan provides the exact right amount of light and quiet and beauty necessary for any artist of any trade. The days are long and the nights are full of the best company and laughter. I'm so grateful for my time there, and I'm so eager to come back.” - Fran Hoepfner

“The environment at Craigardan allowed me the clarity to see even old work anew--poems from as many as fifteen years ago were given a little more space to breathe and roam, and I could understand them in a new and different fashion.” - William Camponovo

“There were so many positives to this residency, it's hard to pick one. I'm especially grateful for the time and space to have full and complex conversations, ongoing over days, looping in new folks, new perspectives and new ideas.” - Margaret Boozer

“As I writer, I am rarely at a loss for words, but after my time at Craigardan, it's hard to find the exact language to capture the energy, support, surprise, beauty and momentum this residency gave me. I am so grateful to have been in community with such an incredible group

of people who wholeheartedly believe in supporting arts and artists with their whole hearts. I am changed and grateful and know this is just the beginning of learning about the impact of all the gifts I got to take and keep close with me as I continue my creative life.”Lu Chekowsky

“In the deep quiet of the place, I was able to hear myself.” - C. Hinz

“The word that encompasses my time at Craigardan is freedom. Freedom to focus on my craft, to engage in community, to learn, move my body in nature, and to sit in silence. The freedom allowed me to make every day its own type of adventure, whether in solitude or with others.” - Victoria Buitron

“Each day offered wonder - a storm traveling down a mountainside, a turkey walking by and checking us out

while we cooked dinner, Tiger Swallowtail Butterflies cruising the clover patches - it feeds you. Feeds your art, too.” - Michele Parker Randall

Craigardan is “a down-to-earth residency that is all about supporting its artists, celebrating the land, sharing with fellow artists, and getting some serious work done."

- Evan Shopper

“Craigardan is a place that challenges you to work more intensively and more deeply. Its beauty inspires you; its community encourages you.” - Brad Shingleton

“The space! the care of the staff! I felt hosted, but also had a high degree of freedom to dip in and out of what the space had to offer: to do my thing if I needed to, participate and host experiences if I wanted to. This was the ideal balance.” - Cedric Jamet

An impromptu dinner out on the farm with workshop participants
TOP L: Mark Shapiro loading the new wood kiln
TOP R: The culinary arts tie agriculture with creative practice
RIGHT: Visual Arts Resident Dennis Delay (’22, ’23) giving an Applebarn Talk
BOTTOM L: The new Applebarn in 2024

come be you

Mission. Craigardan is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization with a mission to encourage the human imagination to interpret the world with philosophical, ecological, and artistic perspective.

We envision an Adirondack region defined by its makers who are committed to the development of sustainable systems that integrate the needs of human communities with the integrity of the natural world.

Equity Vision. We create space, hold space, and build space to benefit all.

We believe in providing equitable opportunities for all people. We are intentionally focused on the support and implementation of inclusivity, with the goal of eliminating barriers to participation by Indigenous Peoples, people of color, people who identify as LGBTQIA+, and people with disabilities, as well as all who are historically underserved, under-resourced, and underrepresented.

Craigardan is antiracist. We reject racial hatred, bias, systemic racism, and the oppression of marginalized groups. We are actively raising our own awareness of and unconscious complicity in systemic racism through trainings, dialogue, accountability, and truth and reconciliation processes.

TOP L: A food + pottery collaboration, 2019
TOP R: Ceramic Arts Resident Chloe Wingerter (’21) in the clay studio
BOTTOM: The new Main Campus and Farm clearings in a sea of springtime green, 2023

Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.