Artist Residencies in Amsterdam
14 residenciesin Amsterdam, Netherlands
Amsterdam can be a very good residency city if you want serious studio time in a place with a dense art network. The city is compact, easy to move through by bike, and full of museums, galleries, project spaces, and artist-run studios. That mix matters. You can spend the morning in the studio, see an exhibition in the afternoon, and still make it to an opening across town without losing the whole day.
The residency scene here is especially strong for artists who want research, critique, and connection rather than a quick production sprint. Many programs support visual arts and interdisciplinary practices, and several of the most established residencies in the Netherlands are based in Amsterdam. English is widely used, which helps if you are coming in from abroad and trying to build a temporary working life fast.
Why artists keep choosing Amsterdam
Amsterdam has long been one of the main art cities in Europe, but what makes it practical is the way different parts of the scene fit together. Major institutions sit alongside smaller artist-led spaces. That means you can see excellent exhibitions, meet curators, and also spend time in communities that still feel direct and peer-based.
The city is strong for artists who want:
- access to major museums and contemporary art institutions
- a dense gallery network
- artist-run and interdisciplinary spaces
- critical studio feedback
- international peers and visiting professionals
It also helps that Amsterdam connects easily to other Dutch art centers like Rotterdam, The Hague, Maastricht, Utrecht, and Haarlem. If your residency time stretches beyond the city itself, that wider network gives you more to work with.
Residencies that shape the city
Rijksakademie van beeldende kunsten
The Rijksakademie is one of the best-known residency programs in the Netherlands, and for good reason. It offers a two-year residency for visual artists with a strong research focus. Artists get studio space, access to technical workshops and specialists, a work budget and stipend structure, and a highly international peer environment.
What stands out here is the amount of infrastructure. The program is built for experimentation, not just final outcomes. If your practice needs time, technical support, and regular conversations with serious peers and visiting professionals, it can be a strong fit.
De Ateliers
De Ateliers is another major two-year program, centered on studio development in central Amsterdam. It is known for close critical engagement, regular studio visits, and a clear commitment to helping artists push their practice over time. The environment is serious but supportive, and the long duration gives you room to make real shifts in your work.
This is a good match if you want structure without feeling boxed in. It tends to suit artists who are ready to work independently, respond well to critique, and want sustained contact with a strong artistic community.
Thami Mnyele Foundation Artist-in-Residence
This program is focused on artists from Africa and the African diaspora, with cultural exchange at its center. It offers accommodation, studio space, a stipend, travel support, and visa assistance. The setting is designed to support reflection, dialogue, and exchange rather than pressure you toward a polished end product.
If your work touches migration, identity, transnational histories, or forms of cultural connection, this residency has a clear and thoughtful framework. The practical support also makes a difference, especially for artists arriving from abroad.
AiR Nieuw en Meer
AiR Nieuw en Meer sits within a larger artist community in a former military depot near the Oeverlanden area, close to the lake Nieuwe Meer. It offers guest studio stays of up to three months and gives you access to a broad community of artists and creative businesses.
This is a good option if you want autonomy, quiet, and a less institution-heavy environment. The setting is more spacious and reflective than central Amsterdam, but still connected to the city. For many artists, that balance is exactly the point.
BijlmAIR
BijlmAIR, the residency of CBK Zuidoost in collaboration with Bradwolff Projects and the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, gives artists a temporary place to live and work in the Bijlmer. It includes working and living space, an exhibition space, and a modest budget. The connection to local institutions makes it useful if you want to work in a neighborhood context while still being linked to the larger museum ecosystem.
What kind of artist fits Amsterdam well
Amsterdam tends to work best for artists who want research time, clear structure, and access to conversation. If your practice is concept-driven, collaborative, or interdisciplinary, the city offers a lot of useful contact points. It is especially strong for painting, sculpture, installation, performance, moving image, and mixed practices that benefit from studio support and critique.
The city can be less comfortable if you need a very low-cost, remote, or highly isolated environment. Living costs are high, and independent studio space is hard to come by. A residency that includes housing and a studio can make the difference between a productive stay and a stressful one.
In practical terms, Amsterdam works well if you are looking for:
- deep studio development
- network-building in a visible art city
- institutional support alongside peer exchange
- access to technical workshops or fabrication help
- a base for traveling across the Dutch art scene
Living and working costs
Amsterdam is expensive, and that affects how useful a residency feels. Housing costs move quickly, and studio space outside a residency can be difficult to secure. If a program gives you accommodation, workspace, and even a modest stipend, that support has real value here.
Typical costs can include:
- shared room rental that can run high compared with many other European cities
- materials and transport
- food and daily living expenses
- occasional costs related to museum visits, openings, and social time
Because the city is compact and bike-friendly, transport is usually manageable. Many artists rely on cycling for daily movement, and the train system makes it easy to visit nearby cities for exhibitions and studio visits.
Moving around the city
Biking is the simplest way to navigate Amsterdam. The city is built for it, and most art neighborhoods are easy to reach on two wheels. Trams, buses, metro lines, and ferries fill in the gaps, especially if you are moving between central Amsterdam and Amsterdam Noord.
If you are planning to use a residency as a networking base, this matters. You can move between museums, galleries, project spaces, and artist studios without needing to plan your whole day around transport.
The neighborhoods artists often pay attention to include:
- Amsterdam Noord for larger, more flexible creative spaces and experimental venues
- De Pijp for a central, well-connected base
- Jordaan and central Amsterdam for museum access and gallery proximity
- Amsterdam West for a mixed and increasingly creative area
- Nieuw en Meer / Oeverlanden for a quieter studio community near water and open space
Visa and entry basics
If you are from the EU, EEA, or Switzerland, the process is straightforward. If you are coming from outside those areas, you may need a Schengen visa for a short stay or a residence permit for a longer residency, depending on the program. Some residencies help with invitation letters, visa guidance, or residence paperwork, but not all do.
It helps to check early how the residency is framed administratively. Some programs are treated more like research, some as work, and some as study-like support. That can affect what you need to enter and stay legally.
How to approach Amsterdam residencies
The strongest applications usually show a clear practice and a reason for being in Amsterdam specifically. A generic proposal rarely helps. If you are applying, make your case in practical terms: what do you need from the residency, what kind of conversation or infrastructure will support your work, and how will you use the time well?
A few things help a lot:
- a focused portfolio with recent work
- a concise artist statement
- a project or research plan that fits the residency model
- proof that you can work independently
- clear evidence that you will use the city, not just stay in it
If the program offers technical workshops, peer visits, or public presentation opportunities, say how those parts connect to your practice. The best applications usually show that you understand the residency as a working environment, not just a place to get away for a while.
Where to keep looking
Amsterdam’s residency landscape changes often, and smaller opportunities can be just as useful as the well-known ones. If you are searching broadly, keep an eye on TransArtists, DutchCulture, AIR_J, Res Artis, and local artist-run networks. Those sources are useful for finding guest studios, project-based residencies, and programs that may not get much visibility outside the Netherlands.
That wider search matters because Amsterdam is not only about the big-name institutions. The city’s artist-run culture is a big part of its value. Sometimes the most useful stay is the one that gives you a quiet studio, a modest budget, and a community that actually makes room for conversation.
If you want a city where you can work hard, meet people who care about making, and stay close to a serious art ecosystem, Amsterdam is a strong place to look. Just go in with a clear plan, a realistic budget, and a sense of what kind of studio rhythm you need.

AGA LAB
Amsterdam, Netherlands
AGA LAB offers an Artist in Residence (AiR) program in Amsterdam, designed to foster research and experimentation in the field of printing techniques, color, and image carriers. With facilities that promote non-toxic methods and an urban agricultural garden cultivating ink plants, AGA LAB provides a unique context for artistic development. The residency is available to both national and international artists who can apply directly or be invited based on a specific proposal. Accommodations include two guest rooms within the Broedplaats BOUW artist space where the studio is also located, allowing 24-hour access. Residents also enjoy exchange opportunities with (inter)national colleagues and access to a communal kitchen.

AiR Nieuw en Meer
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Artist community Nieuw en Meer in Amsterdam offers the AiR Nieuw en Meer guest studio residency, open to artists in all disciplines for work periods of up to three months. Located in the scenic Oeverlanden park by the Nieuwe Meer lake, the 48m² studio includes a sleeping area, kitchen, shower, toilet, floor heating, and wifi, with monthly rent of €425 (or €550 for couples). Residents engage with the community through occasional events and must give a presentation at the end of their stay.

airWG
Amsterdam, Netherlands
airWG, situated in the WG grounds of Amsterdam, is an international artist residency program launched in 2015 by the atelierWG community. Originally founded in 1989 and encompassing 120 artist studios, the program is housed in the historical halls 18 and 19. It's dedicated to fostering artistic growth and integration into Amsterdam's cultural landscape. The residency offers a 70 m2 private studio and living space to a diverse range of creatives, including visual artists, mixed media practitioners, performance artists, designers, researchers, curators, and writers. The three-month program emphasizes reflection, creation, and dissemination, culminating in an exhibition at puntWG, an interdisciplinary project space.

Amsterdam City of Refuge
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Amsterdam City of Refuge is a residency program in Amsterdam, Netherlands, likely part of the ICORN (International Cities of Refuge Network) initiative, offering temporary protective residencies for persecuted writers, journalists, and artists unable to work freely in their home countries. It provides grants for living costs, accommodation, access to public services, travel expenses, and professional networking support, with a standard duration of two years.

Amsterdam Writer-in-Residence
Amsterdam, Netherlands
The Amsterdam Writer-in-Residence Programme, established in by the Dutch Foundation for Literature, offers international writers (novelists, poets, essayists, and children's book authors whose work has been translated into Dutch) a furnished apartment above the Athenaeum Bookshop in central Amsterdam, with access to the University of Amsterdam Library. Residents typically stay for 4-8 weeks, engage in their own writing and research, and participate in local literary events like readings or lectures. A residency grant is provided, though travel costs are generally not covered separately.
De Ateliers
Amsterdam, Netherlands
De Ateliers is an independent artists' institute in Amsterdam offering a two-year postgraduate studio and tutoring program for emerging visual artists, with individual feedback from renowned tutors, studios, stipend, production budget, housing, and facilities.
Deshima Amsterdam
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Deshima Amsterdam is an artist-in-residence program promoting cultural exchange between the Netherlands and Japan, primarily open to Japanese artists and creative individuals with an open mind. It prefers projects focusing on Amsterdam's geographical, cultural, social, or historical aspects, expecting participants to demonstrate independence, curiosity, and flexibility, with support including guidance, networking, and presentation opportunities. Residencies typically last 30 to 90 days, with no fixed accommodation or studio provided; artists arrange these according to their needs.

Eye Artist and Scholar in Residence
Amsterdam, Netherlands
The Eye Artist and Scholar in Residence program at Eye Filmmuseum in Amsterdam invites artists and scholars to explore its vast collection of approximately 60,000 film titles, photos, posters, and archives, hosted at the Eye Collection Centre with access to research facilities, vaults, and ateliers. Participants develop projects leading to public presentations such as screenings, lectures, installations, or publications, with occasional open calls to diversify selections. Past residents have worked with themes like slapstick films and human behavior, culminating in exhibitions at Eye's project space.

Françoise van den Bosch Foundation
Amsterdam, Netherlands
The Françoise van den Bosch Foundation offers an artist-in-residence program for international jewellery artists at Studio Rian de Jong in Amsterdam, providing a live/work studio apartment/workshop for three months (March 1 to May 31) and a €500 materials grant. Residents engage with Amsterdam's vibrant jewellery community, present work in a street vitrine, and document their experience via blog, Instagram, or report. The program, running since , selects one artist annually based on a work plan emphasizing international exchange.

Het Vijfde Seizoen
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Het Vijfde Seizoen (The Fifth Season) is an artist residency program focused on mental health and psychiatry, where professional artists work in psychiatric contexts to address topics in mental health care and de-stigmatize psychiatric patients through their art projects. Originally located at the Altrecht GGz mental health institute in Den Dolder, Utrecht, from 1998 to , the program has recently restarted at Fukuroda Hospital in Daigo, Japan, with artists like Sayaka Abe working online or on-site for periods such as three months.
Rijksakademie
Amsterdam, Netherlands
The Rijksakademie in Amsterdam offers a two-year international residency program for around fifty artists, focusing on research, experimentation, and new work production. Artists receive a studio, work budget, and stipend, along with access to advice from a diverse range of art professionals. The residency boasts a comprehensive infrastructure, including technical workshops with specialists, a library, and an art collection. It encourages freedom in research and working methods within an interdisciplinary environment. The residency fosters a highly international, multi-disciplinary community, where artists benefit from peer dialogue, professional visits, technical guidance, and collaborative opportunities. Each year, approximately 22 artists are selected for the residency, with about half from the Netherlands and the rest from around the world. This diverse community allows for a rich exchange of ideas and practices. The residency aims to provide space for artistic research, reflection, and experimentation, inviting artists to deepen and explore their practice in a supportive and innovative setting.

Thami Mnyele Foundation
Amsterdam, Netherlands
The Thami Mnyele Foundation, established in 1990, runs a three-month artists-in-residence program in Amsterdam for artists from Africa and the diaspora, focusing on contemporary visual arts including painting, drawing, photography, sculpture, video, film, audio, and multimedia to promote cultural exchange with the Netherlands. Residents receive free housing and studio space in a historic school building, a monthly stipend of around 900 euros for living and materials, travel reimbursement, insurance, and opportunities for networking. A shorter residency option exists for invited artists needing temporary accommodation without stipend or travel support.

Theatre in Palm
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Theatre in Palm Residencies offers a unique opportunity for emerging theatre artists to develop professionally and expand their networks across Europe. Hosted in 12 partner countries, these two-week residencies focus on collaboration, inspiration, and the creation of shareable works. Each residency will produce a co-production in various forms, emphasizing themes like social impact, equality, and environmental sustainability. Participants will receive travel, accommodation, and compensation. The program aims to foster cross-cultural exchanges and enhance the visibility of emerging artists in the European theatre scene.

Vertalershuis Amsterdam
Amsterdam, Netherlands
The Vertalershuis Amsterdam, or Translators' House Amsterdam, is a residency program for translators of Dutch-language literature and literary non-fiction, offering five studios with private bathrooms, internet-equipped computers, a library of Dutch literature, communal kitchen, and laundry facilities. Residents must have a contract with a foreign publisher and can stay from a minimum of 2 weeks to a maximum of 2 months, with free accommodation (minus a small utility deduction), a €1000 monthly travel and working grant, and access to professional assistance. It is located in central Amsterdam near museums, publishers, and cultural hubs, and is financed by the Dutch Foundation for Literature.
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