from e-flux
Application period: February 28–March 28, 2023, 11:59pm
Hyundai Artlab has announced a new fellowship for two art writers to consider their communities through the lens of contemporary art.
The future of art writing is transnational, multigenerational, and decentralized, and the structures that support it should nurture the diffuse, the diverse, and the local. As an extension of our mission to champion writing about today’s most compelling artists, celebrate connectivity in all its forms, and envision the future, Hyundai Artlab is excited to announce the Artlab Editorial Fellowship.
Hyundai Artlab is on the lookout for two writers dedicated to their geographic regions who explore today’s social issues through the lens of contemporary art. This fellowship is for art writers at any stage of their career, providing two fellows 10,000 USD each to produce three pieces of writing in 2023. We are looking for writers who will bring new perspectives to a global network of readers and explore their communities with an eye toward forward-thinking solutions. The program is open to applicants anywhere in the world.
Launched in 2022, Artlab Editorial is a new destination for critical engagement with contemporary art. With interviews, reviews, essays and profiles, we publish writing that offers an opportunity to better understand the past, reconsider the contemporary, and envision the future. In our first year, we published over 20 writers from around the world, including Rahel Aima, Julie Baumgardner, Allie Biswas, Nancy Baker Cahill, Scarlet Cheng, Samantha Culp, Claire L. Evans, Orit Gat, Charlotte Kent, Dean Kissick, Shannon Lee, Michelle Lhooq, Manuela Moscoso, Syaura Qotrunadha, Andrew Russeth, Kenny Schachter, Barry Schwabsky, Monica Uszerowicz, Wendy Vogel, Claire Voon, and Linda Yablonsky.
Fellowship structure
The Fellowship is designed to produce a vibrant body of new art writing and strengthen connections between writers and artists across the world. With guidance from Artlab Editorial’s community of editors and advisors, the fellows will produce three pieces of web-based editorial content for publication on Artlab Editorial. We encourage diverse perspectives and emerging insights into today’s art world.
Artlab Editorial Fellowship Advisors
To enrich the experience of the Fellows and strengthen Artlab’s community of writers, the Editorial Fellowship Advisors will include a committee of Artlab editors and past contributors:
Orit Gat is a writer and art critic living in London. She is a contributing editor at The White Review and Art Papers. She won the Creative Capital/Warhol Foundation Arts Writers Grant in the short-form writing category in 2015, and was a finalist for the Absolut Art Writing Award (2017) and the International Award for Art Criticism (2017, 2018).
Barry Schwabsky is the art critic for The Nation. He also writes regularly for such publications as New Left Review and Artforum (as a co-editor of international reviews). His most recent books include collections of poems, Trembling Hand Equilibrium (Black Square Editions, New York, 2015) and literary criticism, including Heretics of Language (Black Square Editions, 2018).
Shannon Lee is a writer and editor in New York covering art, culture, the environment, and AAPI identity. She is currently the editor of The Amp at the Asian American Arts Alliance. Previously, she was an Associate Editor at Artsy and Editor and Senior Producer at Silica Mag.
Hunter Braithwaite is a writer and editor based in New York. His writing has appeared in Artforum, ARTnews, and BOMB.
About Hyundai Artlab
Artlab at Hyundai Motor expands access to the arts for all and deepens the engagement between institutions, artists, and communities. Connecting a global network of artists and audiences through exhibitions, commissions, research, and more, Artlab supports the presentation of works that inspire and broaden our understanding of the world. Through partnerships with leading institutions, a comprehensive digital archive, and new writing shared online, we provide a global audience the opportunity to reconsider the contemporary and envision the future.