Artist Residencies in China
Complete guide for artists looking for residencies in China
China offers a residency landscape that is broad, varied, and very much shaped by place. You’ll find major international programs in Shanghai and Beijing, university-linked opportunities, artist-run spaces, and quieter residencies in smaller cities or rural art communities. The spread is exciting, but it also means you need to read each program carefully. A residency in China can give you strong institutional access, a lot of cultural exchange, and space to make ambitious work — if the structure matches what you actually need.
That structure matters. Some residencies are fully funded, some cover housing and studio only, and some are self-funded. A few are built around exchange, public programming, or research rather than solo studio time. If you’re used to applying in systems where funding and expectations are more standardized, China can feel open-ended at first. The upside is choice. The challenge is sorting out what kind of support you’re really getting.
How the residency landscape is spread across China
China does not have one central residency network. Instead, programs are scattered across major art cities and regional sites. Beijing and Shanghai remain the strongest hubs, with Chengdu, Hangzhou, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, and Wuhan also offering important options. Outside those centers, you’ll also find residencies in places like Yunnan, Hunan, and mountain or village settings near Beijing and in southwest China.
This geographic spread shapes the experience. In Beijing and Shanghai, you’ll often have access to museums, galleries, curators, universities, and a large concentration of artists. In Chengdu or Hangzhou, the pace can feel more open, with lower living costs and a different local rhythm. Rural or semi-rural residencies usually trade urban infrastructure for space, landscape, and a stronger sense of immersion.
Directory listings suggest there are 50+ residencies across mainland China and Hong Kong in the wider China Residencies and Res Artis ecosystem, while Reviewed by Artists currently lists 26 programs in China. That mix tells you something important: the field is active, but not always easy to compare at a glance. A program can look strong on paper and still be a poor fit if the language support, studio setup, or public expectations don’t align with your practice.
What funding usually looks like
Residencies in China tend to fall into a few common funding models.
- Fully funded: housing, studio, stipend, and sometimes travel support
- Partially funded: housing and studio included, with the artist covering travel and production
- Self-funded: participation fees are expected, sometimes with limited scholarships
- Exchange or invitation-based: often built around research, collaboration, or institutional partnerships
The most generous programs are usually attached to museums, universities, municipal arts bodies, or foundations. Artist-run programs and independent spaces may offer a strong community and a good working environment, but less financial support. That does not automatically make them weaker. It just means you need to budget carefully and ask direct questions about what the fee includes.
When a residency says “housing provided,” check what that actually means. Does it include a private room or shared accommodation? Is there a studio on site? Are utilities covered? Is there any material support? If you’re making large-scale work, installation, performance, or film, you’ll want to know what the residency can realistically handle before you commit.
Where different kinds of practices tend to fit
Beijing is especially strong if you want proximity to institutions, studios, museums, and art districts. Areas like Caochangdi, Wudaokou, Haidian, and Huairou show how varied the city can be. Some programs are tightly connected to the center of the art world; others are in quieter, more rural zones on the outskirts. Beijing can suit visual artists, curators, researchers, new media artists, and anyone whose work benefits from dense networks and public-facing opportunities.
Shanghai is often the best match for artists who want an international urban setting with strong contemporary art infrastructure. It’s a good city for cross-disciplinary work, design, photography, moving image, writing, and projects that benefit from visibility and exchange. The Swatch Art Peace Hotel is one well-known example: a residency built around creative exchange, with apartments and workshops in the city, and an open mix of practices ranging from visual art to music, dance, film, and writing.
Chengdu has become increasingly important for artists looking for a calmer pace and a lower cost of living than Beijing or Shanghai. It can be a good fit for sculpture, installation, community-based work, and interdisciplinary practices. The city also connects well to southwest China’s regional cultures, which matters if your project involves place-based research or local collaboration.
Hangzhou often connects to universities, design, digital arts, and technology-oriented initiatives. If your work sits between art and computing, media and research, or education and public programming, it’s a city worth looking at closely.
Guangzhou and Shenzhen sit in a fast-moving creative region with a strong design and new media culture. Shenzhen in particular tends to attract artists working with technology, prototyping, performance, and innovation-driven projects.
Outside the big cities, you’ll find residencies that focus on ecology, craft, community, or intercultural exchange. These can be especially good if your practice needs space, slower time, or direct contact with a specific landscape or local community. Just be ready for more logistical complexity and less English support.
Programs and networks worth knowing
One of the most useful resources for China is China Residencies, a directory that gathers many programs in mainland China and Hong Kong. It is less a single residency than a map of the field. That makes it useful for comparing location, funding, studio conditions, and discipline fit before you apply anywhere.
A4 Residency Art Center in Sichuan is a good example of a program built around sustainability and transdisciplinary exchange. It welcomes artists alongside writers, scholars, musicians, architects, designers, and other creative practitioners. Residencies like this are a strong fit if your work is research-based, collaborative, or oriented toward public outcomes.
ACENTRICSPACE in Shanghai is one of the few independent artist-run residencies in China. It has hosted artists from many countries and is open to contemporary artists throughout the year. The program includes studio, accommodation, and exhibition space, but it is fee-based rather than funded. If you’re looking for an artist-run setting with an active local community, this kind of residency can be rewarding, especially if you’re able to bring your own funding.
Platform China / Beijing International Artist Platform is useful if you want access to Beijing’s exhibition ecosystem and a more networked urban experience. It supports artists, curators, writers, designers, and researchers, and is a good example of how residencies in China often blend production with public presentation.
There are also exchange-based programs tied to cultural partnerships, such as the China Artists Residency Programme linked to Northern Ireland’s arts infrastructure. These tend to have specific eligibility rules, so they’re worth watching if you work in a region with reciprocal cultural agreements.
Visa, language, and day-to-day logistics
China does not have a simple, universal artist visa category. In practice, you may enter under a business, exchange, or study-related visa depending on the residency structure and your nationality. The host usually provides an invitation letter and supporting documents, but you should always confirm what visa category the program expects you to use. This part matters early, because a residency that looks perfect on paper can become difficult if the paperwork is unclear.
Language support also varies a lot. International-facing university programs usually offer more English support, while smaller artist-run spaces may rely on limited English or informal translation help. Ask whether there is bilingual staff, a translator, or a cultural liaison. If you need fabrication help, transportation support, or technical troubleshooting, language becomes part of the actual working conditions, not just a side issue.
You should also expect some bureaucracy. Local registration, payment transfers, shipping materials, internet access, and holiday scheduling can all affect the residency experience. None of this is unusual, but it’s easier if you plan for it. A host that is responsive and organized can make a huge difference, especially if you’re navigating the country for the first time.
How to judge whether a residency is a good fit
The strongest residencies in China tend to be clear about their priorities. Some want public-facing work. Some want research. Some want community exchange. Some are best for quiet production. Before you apply, look closely at the following:
- Is the residency fully funded, partially funded, or self-funded?
- Is housing included, and what kind of housing is it?
- Is there a real studio, or just a room to work in?
- Are travel, visa, insurance, and materials covered?
- Is the program open to international artists?
- How much English support is available?
- Are talks, open studios, or workshops required?
- Does the program support your medium technically?
- Is the setting urban, industrial, rural, or campus-based?
These questions sound basic, but they tell you almost everything you need to know. A residency that looks generous may still be a mismatch if it expects heavy public engagement and your work needs solitude. A fee-based residency may be worth it if it gives you a strong network, good facilities, and enough space to develop serious work. The key is matching the program’s structure to your practice, not the other way around.
What tends to work well in China
Artists often do well in China residencies when their proposals are flexible, context-aware, and able to connect with local audiences or institutions. Practices that usually fit well include visual art, sculpture, installation, new media, video, performance, writing, curating, socially engaged work, and interdisciplinary research. Programs often value projects that can grow through exchange, public presentation, or collaboration.
If your work is highly private, studio-only, or dependent on a very specific production chain, ask careful questions before committing. Many residencies in China are open to experimentation, but they also expect you to engage with a broader social and cultural context. That can be a real strength if you’re ready for it.
China is not one residency scene. It’s a set of different ecosystems with different costs, rhythms, and expectations. If you take the time to read each one closely, you can find something that offers not just space to work, but a real shift in how your practice moves.
Top-rated in China

Swatch Art Peace Hotel
Shanghai, China
The Swatch Art Peace Hotel artist residency in Shanghai is a unique cultural initiative that combines artistic creation with the vibrant energy of the city. Established by Chema Alvargonzalez and supported by Memoria Artística Chema Alvargonzalez, it focuses on creative exchange among international artists. The residency is situated in a historic modernist-style building, fostering an inspiring environment for artists. The program invites a diverse range of contemporary artists, including dancers, musicians, photographers, filmmakers, and writers, to live and work in the heart of Shanghai. During their stay, artists contribute an artistic "trace," enriching the residency's legacy. The Swatch Art Peace Hotel embraces artistic freedom and encourages artists to explore new ideas and collaborations. This residency is known for its strong connection to the global art scene and its commitment to supporting artistic development in a dynamic urban setting.

K11 Art Village
Wuhan, China
The K11 Art Village, inaugurated in 2011 in Wuhan, China, is a dynamic platform designed to support and nurture emerging artists. It features seven studios and a 500-square-meter exhibition space dedicated to its artist-in-residence program. The village focuses on cultivating young talent, aiding in their artistic career development through curatorial support, project management, and creative communication guidance. It emphasizes community engagement and encourages interaction and exchange among artists and the local community. Over the past decade, K11 Art Village has established partnerships with prestigious institutions such as the Nissan Art Award in Japan, the Royal Academy of Arts in the UK, and the British and French consulates in China. The K11 Art Foundation, founded by Dr. Adrian Cheng in 2010, is a non-profit organization in Hong Kong committed to nurturing emerging Asian artists and promoting contemporary art. The foundation organizes various art projects, including exhibitions, residencies, and educational programs, fostering cross-cultural collaborations with global art and cultural institutions. These collaborations have included partnerships with renowned entities like the Royal Academy of Arts, Serpentine Galleries, Centre Pompidou, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, and MoMA, among others. The foundation's efforts significantly contribute to expanding creative horizons and strengthening ties within the art community.
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Frequently asked questions
How many artist residencies are there in China?
We currently list 26 artist residencies in China on Reviewed by Artists, with real reviews from artists who have attended.
Are there funded residencies in China?
Yes, 9 residencies in China offer a stipend. 9 of these are fully funded with both stipend and housing included.
How do I apply to an artist residency in China?
Most residencies in China accept applications through their own website. Visit each program's listing on Reviewed by Artists for direct links, application details, and reviews from past residents to help you decide if it's the right fit.
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