Reviewed by Artists

Artist Residencies in Sheboygan

1 residencyin Sheboygan, United States

Why Sheboygan is on artists’ radar

Sheboygan is small, but the residency scene punches way above its weight. You get:

  • An internationally known industrial residency at the Kohler factory
  • A serious contemporary art center backing artists and experiments
  • Lake Michigan right there, changing light, weather, and mood daily
  • A scale of city where you can actually meet people and be remembered

For a lot of artists, Sheboygan ends up being less about scene-chasing and more about focused time with strong support: equipment, space, and a community that pays attention.

The local art ecosystem in brief

Most of the art energy in Sheboygan runs through the orbit of Kohler and the John Michael Kohler Arts Center (JMKAC). Understanding these anchors helps you pick the right residency.

John Michael Kohler Arts Center (JMKAC)

JMKAC is a contemporary art museum and performing arts hub at 608 New York Ave. It’s known for supporting self-taught artists, immersive environments, and experimental projects. The center:

  • Curates exhibitions of contemporary and self-taught artists
  • Runs performance, film, and community arts programs
  • Administers the Arts/Industry residency with Kohler Co.

If you land a residency nearby, this is a key place to see work, attend openings, and understand how local audiences respond to contemporary practice.

Art Preserve

The Art Preserve is JMKAC’s satellite campus dedicated to artist-built environments and collections from environment builders. It has a dense, immersive feel that can shift how you think about installation, materials, and long-term projects.

Spending time here is useful if your practice involves environments, archives, or narrative spaces. It’s also a way to get a deeper sense of the region’s commitment to nontraditional art histories.

Kohler Co. and the industrial context

Kohler Co., famous for plumbing fixtures and ceramics, is central to Sheboygan’s unique draw for artists. The factory is where the Arts/Industry residency happens, and it offers:

  • Industrial-scale kilns and casting facilities
  • Technical specialists who know the processes inside out
  • A daily rhythm of production that artists can respond to, mimic, resist, or transform

Even if you are not in Arts/Industry, knowing this industrial backdrop can help frame your work conceptually while you are in the area.

Arts/Industry Residency: Factory-scale experimentation

The Arts/Industry Residency, administered by JMKAC and hosted by Kohler Co., is the flagship program that pulls artists to Sheboygan from around the globe.

Core structure

Arts/Industry is built around three-month cohorts based in the Kohler factory in Kohler, just outside Sheboygan. Each year:

  • Up to twelve artists are supported
  • Three cohorts span the year
  • Each cohort includes four artists: two in Pottery and two in Foundry

Residents are expected to commit to the full three months, and the schedule is structured enough that you need to be ready for a focused working period.

What you actually get as a resident

The residency is unusually well-supported. Artists typically receive:

  • 24-hour access to studio space within the factory
  • Industrial materials suited to ceramic and metal work
  • Use of specialized equipment and facilities
  • Technical assistance from factory staff and technicians
  • Photographic services to document work
  • Housing provided by the program
  • Round-trip transportation to and from the residency
  • A modest weekly stipend

This combination makes the residency accessible to artists who might not otherwise be able to experiment at this scale or in this kind of environment.

Who this residency actually suits

You do not need prior clay or metal experience. The program is open to artists from all disciplines, provided you are curious about materials and processes. It tends to suit artists who:

  • Want to push ceramics, sculpture, or casting techniques
  • Are excited by molds, glazes, repetition, and large-scale production tools
  • Enjoy process-driven work that evolves in response to technical constraints
  • Can function in a factory environment, with safety protocols and shift rhythms

If your practice is more conceptual, digital, or text-based, you can still apply, but it helps when your proposal clearly connects to the industrial context, material research, or new forms prompted by the factory setting.

Competitiveness and application mindset

Arts writing has noted that the residency attracts hundreds of applications for a small number of spots annually. That means your application benefits from being very specific about how you will use the facilities.

Typical requirements include an artist statement, a statement of interest, documentation of work, and references. Instead of a generic proposal, clarify:

  • Which processes you want to explore (casting, slip-casting, glazing, metal pouring, etc.)
  • What type of research you want to do: formal, technical, conceptual, or all three
  • How you anticipate working with technicians and staff
  • How you adapt when material experiments fail or shift direction

There is no application fee listed in some directory entries, but always confirm on the official site. Up-to-date information and guidelines are available via JMKAC’s Arts/Industry page at jmkac.org.

MAC House Project: Lakefront time and family-friendly options

The MAC House Project offers a very different kind of residency: lakefront, flexible, and more intimate.

Basic setup

MAC House sits on the Lake Michigan shore and focuses on providing space and time for artists to develop work. Key features include:

  • Independent living and working space by the lake
  • Free accommodations in Sheboygan
  • Free studio space to work
  • Residencies ranging from one week up to three months or an entire season
  • Opportunities to show work during or after your stay

The expectation is that you spend your time creating, evolving your practice, and developing work that can be shared with the MAC House community, often in an exhibition at or near the end of the stay.

Family residency option

One distinctive feature is a dedicated family residency option. MAC House:

  • Uses a broad definition of “family,” focusing on caregiving relationships
  • Aims to make space for artists who are caregivers or who have dependents
  • Tailors accommodations to increase access for those balancing art and care work

If you routinely skip residencies because they are not set up for kids or dependent care, this program is worth a closer look.

Who thrives at MAC House

This residency is a good fit if you:

  • Want quiet, time, and natural surroundings instead of industrial facilities
  • Work well autonomously without heavy institutional scheduling
  • Need flexible residency length options
  • Want to respond to a lakefront environment through sound, image, writing, or material practice
  • Are seeking a setup that acknowledges caregiving realities

Outcome expectations are present but not corporate. You are there to make work and share it, but how that looks is often shaped in conversation with the hosts.

The Sheboygan Collective: Downtown studio and community work

The Sheboygan Collective’s Artist-in-Residence program focuses on building community through art while giving you a downtown home base.

Core offer

Residencies typically range from one to three months and include:

  • A bright, dedicated studio space in downtown Sheboygan
  • Access to a small content suite for documenting your work
  • Promotion of your practice and process across their social channels
  • An optional weekend exhibition at the end of your residency

This is an unpaid residency: you receive space, promotion, and documentation tools, but no stipend. That makes budgeting important if you are coming from out of town.

Community engagement requirement

Each artist contributes about two hours per week to community engagement. That could look like:

  • Workshops for youth or adults
  • A community-based art project
  • Open studios or process-focused visits
  • An artist talk or informal Q&A
  • Public-facing work that invites participation

The program prioritizes proposals that are inclusive, community-centered, and aligned with the idea of “creating art in community.” If your practice already leans toward social practice or public engagement, this structure can amplify what you do.

Who this suits

The Sheboygan Collective works well for artists who:

  • Want a downtown base and steady studio access
  • Enjoy direct contact with local audiences
  • Are comfortable teaching, facilitating, or sharing process
  • Want to build documentation and social media presence for their work
  • Can financially support themselves during an unpaid residency

If you are building a portfolio in socially engaged art, this residency gives you concrete examples of community collaboration and public programs to show in future applications.

Where you might live, work, and show

Sheboygan is compact, so location choices are less about specific “arts districts” and more about proximity to your residency and the lake.

Downtown and near JMKAC

Downtown Sheboygan and the area around JMKAC are good if you want:

  • Walkability to cafes, shops, and some galleries
  • Easy access to museum events and openings
  • Short trips to the Sheboygan Collective studio space

This is a practical base for community-facing artists and those who do not want to rely too heavily on a car.

Lakefront and South Pier

The lakefront and South Pier area give you:

  • Immediate access to water, changing light, and open horizons
  • A quieter feel than the core of downtown
  • More direct inspiration if your work responds to environment or weather

MAC House is already situated near the shore, so lake viewing, recording, and sketching can be woven into your daily routine.

Kohler village area

If you are in Arts/Industry, you will be spending significant time in Kohler village at the factory. The residency arranges housing, so commute logistics are handled, but you may still want to understand:

  • The distance between your accommodations and the factory
  • How you will get into Sheboygan proper for events or supplies
  • Access to groceries, medical care, and other essentials

For most participants, the residency’s infrastructure smooths out these details, yet it still helps to ask clear questions before arrival.

Cost of living and budgeting

Compared with large art hubs, Sheboygan is generally more affordable, but costs still add up, especially if you choose an unpaid residency.

Key budget categories

When planning a stay for any of these residencies, check:

  • Housing: included or not, and whether utilities are covered
  • Food: groceries vs. eating out, plus any dietary needs
  • Transportation: car rental, gas, or local transit options
  • Materials: whether the program supplies them or you purchase your own
  • Shipping: sending work home, especially heavy or fragile items
  • Weather gear: winter clothing if you arrive in colder months
  • Insurance: health and travel coverage, plus any studio insurance rules

Housing is included for Arts/Industry. MAC House provides lodging and studio, which lowers your costs. The Sheboygan Collective offers space but not pay, so you will need to budget for rent and basic living expenses unless you are local.

Getting there and getting around

You usually reach Sheboygan by combining air, road, and sometimes bus.

Regional access

Common routes include flying into:

  • Milwaukee
  • Green Bay
  • Chicago-area airports, followed by a longer drive

From there, artists often rent a car or arrange a shuttle to Sheboygan. For Arts/Industry, round-trip transportation is part of the offer, so coordinate your travel plans with the program.

Local transportation

Inside Sheboygan, many daily needs can be covered by a mix of walking and short drives. A car helps if you:

  • Stay outside the core downtown or lakefront
  • Need regular access to hardware and material suppliers
  • Plan to explore the wider region or make field recordings and site visits

If you prefer not to drive, ask your residency about walkability, bus options, and any local ride-share patterns that other artists have used.

International artists and visas

If you are not a U.S. citizen or permanent resident, factor visa questions into your planning.

Questions to ask residencies directly

Before committing, ask each program:

  • Do they provide an official letter of invitation describing the residency?
  • Have they hosted international artists recently and on what visa types?
  • How do they handle stipends and tax paperwork for non-U.S. artists?
  • Does working inside the factory (for Arts/Industry) require any additional ID or clearances?

Residencies can usually offer documentation but not legal advice. Building in extra lead time for visa applications and clarifying your legal status during the residency will save stress later.

Timing your Sheboygan residency

Season affects both your experience and how you use your time.

Warm-season stays

Late spring through early fall brings:

  • Milder weather for walking, biking, and lake time
  • More outdoor events and public activities
  • Easier logistics if you rely on walking or cycling

This can be ideal if your work involves outdoor installations, filming, or frequent public engagement.

Cold-season stays

Colder months are quieter and can be intense in a productive way:

  • Less distraction, more studio time
  • Dramatic lakefront atmospheres to work from
  • Need for proper winter clothing and planning for snow and ice

For factory-based or indoor studio work, winter can be perfect if you are prepared.

Picking the right Sheboygan residency for you

Each of the main programs answers a different artistic need. As you decide where to apply, ask yourself three questions:

  • Do you want industrial tools and technical staff, or quiet and autonomy?
  • Do you want community-facing work, or a more private studio period?
  • Do you need housing, stipend support, or can you self-fund?

In short:

  • Arts/Industry is strongest if you want to experiment with ceramics or metal at an industrial scale, with serious technical support and structured time.
  • MAC House Project is ideal if you need flexible time by the lake, independent space, and possibly family-friendly accommodations.
  • The Sheboygan Collective is a good match if you are building community-engaged work, teaching experience, and public-facing projects, and can handle an unpaid but resource-rich residency.

Whichever you choose, Sheboygan offers a mix of industrial rigor, lakefront calm, and community connection that can shift how you work long after you leave.

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