Reviewed by Artists

Artist Residencies in Fiji

Complete guide for artists looking for residencies in Fiji

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How the Fiji residency scene actually works

Fiji doesn’t have a dense grid of residency centers, but it does have a small, distinctive ecosystem that can be powerful for the right practice. Instead of endless open calls, you get:

  • Eco-lodge and hospitality-based residencies where your studio is the beach or a bungalow
  • Regional cultural partnerships that link Fiji to Aotearoa New Zealand, Australia, and wider Te Moana Nui a Kiwa
  • Independent arts workshops like specialist print studios
  • University and cultural-centre programs tied to research and Pacific identity

You’re not going to Fiji for a massive industrial studio complex or a factory of visiting artists. You go for depth: climate, Indigenous knowledge, Pacific identity, and immersion.

Many programs are project-based or exchange-based, not permanent “residency campuses.” That means relationships, themes, and fit matter as much as your portfolio.

Where residencies actually happen: regions and vibes

Suva: institutional, networked, and conversation-heavy

Suva, on Viti Levu, is Fiji’s main cultural and academic centre and the key base for more formal residencies and research stays. It’s home to:

  • The University of the South Pacific (USP)
  • Oceania Centre – a major site for Pacific arts, research, and cultural programming

Suva is where you want to be if you’re looking for:

  • Access to libraries, archives, and researchers
  • Regional Pacific artist networks
  • Public talks, panels, and institutional collaborations
  • Infrastructure for performance, video, and community projects

It’s also where the Oceania Pacific Arts Residency takes place, one of the most significant opportunities linked to climate and Pacific discourse.

Coral Coast & western Viti Levu: workshop and resort-adjacent

The Coral Coast (south of Nadi) and the western side of Viti Levu mix resort areas with pockets of arts activity. For artists, the Coral Coast matters especially because of:

  • Lancaster Press Fiji – an independent print workshop offering residencies and instruction in hand lithography (Res Artis listing)

This region suits you if you want:

  • A specialized studio environment (printmaking, lithography)
  • Quieter surroundings than Suva but not completely remote
  • Accessible transport links via Nadi

Yasawa Islands: eco-lodge immersion and slow time

The Yasawa Islands, particularly Nacula Island, host eco-lodge-based residencies that sit somewhere between an artist retreat and a cultural exchange.

The key example here is the residency at Safe Landing Eco Lodge on Nacula Island, supported through Moonlit Pond Records & Promotions (Fiji Artist Residency – Moonlit Pond).

This kind of residency is ideal if you want:

  • Four weeks of focused time in a laidback, glamping-style setting
  • Strong connection to landscape, ocean, and village life
  • Direct social interaction with guests and staff, often through music and art

Remote islands and village contexts

Outside the main centres, residency-like stays and project visits can still happen, often via:

  • NGO collaborations
  • Community projects and exchanges
  • Informal stays hosted by eco-lodges or local partners

These settings can be creatively intense but require you to be self-sufficient, respectful of local protocol, and comfortable with limited infrastructure.

Key residency programs to know in Fiji

Oceania Pacific Arts Residency (Suva)

Location: Oceania Centre, The University of the South Pacific, Suva
Format: ~6 weeks, shared residency

This tri-nation residency is a collaboration between Creative New Zealand, Creative Australia, and the Oceania Centre at USP. It selects one artist each from Aotearoa New Zealand, Australia, and Fiji for a shared six-week residency centred on Climate Change.

The residency supports established artists to:

  • Develop new work related to climate and Pacific concerns
  • Build relationships and networks across Te Moana Nui a Kiwa
  • Engage locally and regionally through research, workshops, or public events

Disciplines welcomed include:

  • Community arts and cultural development
  • Dance, theatre, and performance
  • Digital arts and experimental practice
  • First Nations arts and culture
  • Fashion and textiles
  • Literature and writing
  • Music and multi-artform work
  • Visual arts

Support typically includes an artist fee, travel, accommodation and per diems, and a separate project budget that can cover materials, local transport, mentorship, and more. The program is designed for established artists (often defined as 10+ years of practice with national or international presentation history).

This is a good fit if you are:

  • Working at an advanced professional level
  • Already engaged with Pacific or climate-related themes
  • Looking for structured exchange rather than solitary studio time
  • Comfortable sharing space and dialogue with artists from the region

Useful starting points:

Safe Landing Eco Lodge Artist-in-Residence (Nacula Island, Yasawas)

Location: Safe Landing Eco Lodge, Nacula Island, Yasawa Islands
Format: Four-week program starting at the beginning of each month

This residency, coordinated by Moonlit Pond Records & Promotions, invites songwriters and visual artists to live and work at a family-run eco-lodge. It emphasizes simplicity, “glamping” comfort, and active participation in the social life of the lodge.

The arrangement usually looks like:

  • Free room and board for the artist (and often one additional person)
  • All meals included, alcohol separate
  • A private bungalow with basic amenities
  • Staff support for practical needs like laundry

In exchange, you’re expected to:

  • Share music in the evenings after dinner – this can be a show, a chill set, or sing-alongs
  • Engage with guests and staff during the day around art and creativity
  • Possibly contribute visual work on site, like murals or environmental installations

If you bring a partner, they’re either contributing creatively, helping the lodge or village, or paying standard guest rates. You bring your own art supplies and are encouraged to leave some materials as gifts for the community.

This residency is a strong fit if you:

  • Work in songwriting, performance, visual art, or a combination
  • Enjoy social, participatory ways of sharing work
  • Want low-cost time in a remote, beautiful setting
  • Are comfortable with island logistics and simple infrastructure

Details and current application info:

Lancaster Press Fiji (Coral Coast)

Location: Coral Coast, Viti Levu
Type: Print workshop residency focused on hand lithography

Lancaster Press Fiji is an independent print studio that offers residencies, workshops, and instruction in hand lithography. It’s one of the few specialized printmaking sites in the region, making it valuable if your work is process-led and technically focused.

Expect:

  • Access to lithography presses, stones, and expert guidance
  • A residency structure centered on studio time and technique
  • A Coral Coast setting, which gives a mix of quiet and relative accessibility

Especially suited for:

  • Printmakers wanting to deepen or experiment with lithography
  • Visual artists looking to translate their work into print
  • Artists who care more about process and craft than public programming

Start here for information:

Who Fiji residencies are really serving (and which practices shine)

Looking across these programs and related listings, Fiji currently offers the most traction for:

  • Visual artists – especially painters, printmakers, and interdisciplinary practitioners
  • Writers and literary artists – particularly where climate, place, and Pacific identity are in play
  • Musicians and songwriters – especially in hospitality-based and eco-lodge residencies
  • Experimental and interdisciplinary artists – those blending performance, sound, installation, and community work
  • First Nations and Pacific cultural practitioners – with interest in regional exchange and decolonial conversations
  • Community-engaged artists – who build projects with local participants, not just about them
  • Printmakers – via Lancaster Press Fiji and related workshops

Less common, but possible through specific projects or wider Pacific programs:

  • Film and moving image
  • Architecture, spatial practice, and socially engaged design
  • Arts education and pedagogy-focused projects

Costs, logistics, and what to budget for

Costs in Fiji shift a lot depending on where you are and how self-contained the residency is.

Suva and urban stays

Suva tends to have:

  • More affordable everyday costs compared with resort zones
  • Higher prices for imported goods and specialized materials
  • Better access to internet, printing, transport, and supplies

For institutional residencies, your accommodation, per diems, and local transport may be partially or fully covered. Always check what’s actually included.

Nadi, Coral Coast, and resort areas

Here you’ll find:

  • Higher prices driven by tourism, especially close to major resorts
  • More consistent access to airport links and visitor services
  • Potentially bundled costs if accommodation and meals are part of the residency

Yasawa Islands and remote areas

Remote island residencies can look “cheap” at first glance because housing and meals are included, but you still need to think about:

  • Boat or plane transfers from Nadi to the island
  • Baggage and freight costs for art materials
  • Internet access (sometimes limited or expensive)
  • Backup budget in case of weather disruptions affecting ferries and flights

Practical budgeting checklist

When you plan a Fiji residency, line-item budget for:

  • International flights
  • Domestic flights, ferries, or transfers to your residency site
  • Materials and tools (including what’s realistic to source locally)
  • Data and communication (SIM, mobile data, or local Wi‑Fi costs)
  • Insurance (health, travel, and possibly art work insurance)
  • Visa or permit fees if applicable
  • Contingency funds for unexpected transport and materials costs

Residencies that cover housing and food can be very affordable overall, especially if your travel is funded or subsidized.

Visa, entry, and working in Fiji as an artist

Fiji doesn’t promote a dedicated “artist visa,” so you’ll usually be entering under a visitor or work-related permit, depending on what you’re doing.

Questions to resolve early

Before committing to dates, ask:

  • Is your stay essentially research and production only, with no income in Fiji?
  • Will you receive fees, honoraria, or teaching payments locally?
  • Are you delivering public workshops, ticketed performances, or commercial events?
  • Are you selling works or taking on commissions while in-country?

The more your activity looks like formal work in Fiji, the more you need to clarify permit requirements.

Documents that help

Regardless of nationality, it’s smart to carry:

  • An invitation or acceptance letter from the residency
  • Evidence of funds or grants supporting your stay
  • A return or onward ticket
  • Accommodation confirmation

Always check current rules via:

  • Fiji Immigration (official government site)
  • Your residency host – they may have handled this for previous artists
  • Your country’s foreign affairs/travel advisory guidance

Cultural context: how to work well in Fiji

Art in Fiji often sits in relationship to land, community, church, and Pacific identity. This shapes how residencies feel on the ground.

Protocol and community relationships

If your project touches villages or communal land, you need to think about:

  • Introductions – being properly introduced by a local partner or host
  • Permissions – checking where you can film, record, gather materials, or stage work
  • Reciprocity – gifts, shared meals, or collaborative outcomes rather than extractive “fieldwork”

Many climate and community-based projects in Fiji succeed because the artist treats relationships as part of the work, not an add-on.

Religion, rhythm, and daily life

Christianity is a significant part of life in many Fijian communities. Practically, that can affect:

  • What happens on Sundays (quiet days, church, fewer activities)
  • Expectations around dress and conduct, especially in villages
  • Scheduling of public events and workshops

Hosts will usually guide you on what’s appropriate. Your job is to respect those cues.

Climate as lived experience

In Fiji, climate change is not just a theme for a grant application. It shows up as:

  • Coastal erosion and village relocation
  • Storm damage and cyclones
  • Changes to reef health and fisheries

If your work engages with climate, environment, or resilience, keep it ethically grounded. Be careful with imagery of damage or vulnerability; think about how the work circulates and who it serves.

Language and communication

Fiji’s main languages include English, iTaukei (Fijian), and Fiji Hindi. For residency life, you can usually operate in English, especially in Suva and tourism areas.

Still, it helps to:

  • Learn a few basic greetings in the local language where you’re staying
  • Ask your host about cultural etiquette for dress, photography, and community interaction

Is Fiji a good match for your practice?

Fiji is a strong fit if you:

  • Are interested in climate, Indigenous knowledge, and Pacific identity
  • Can work independently without heavy infrastructure
  • Are okay with occasional slow internet, weather delays, and off-grid moments
  • Value relationships and cultural exchange as part of the work
  • Are comfortable presenting in informal or semi-formal settings, not just white-cube contexts

Fiji might be challenging if you:

  • Need large-scale fabrication facilities or advanced media labs
  • Rely on continuous high-speed internet for your process
  • Prefer a packed calendar of city openings, galleries, and institutions
  • Want an endless menu of open calls in one country

How to start researching and shortlisting

To map options and stay current, you can:

Treat Fiji not as a quick “prestige stamp” on your CV, but as a place where you can build a deeper, ongoing artistic relationship with the Pacific. If that lands with your practice, a residency here can shift your work in ways that last long after you leave the island.

Frequently asked questions

How many artist residencies are there in Fiji?

We currently list 1 artist residencies in Fiji on Reviewed by Artists, with real reviews from artists who have attended.

Are there funded residencies in Fiji?

We don't currently have data on funded residencies in Fiji. Check individual program listings for the latest information on financial support.

How do I apply to an artist residency in Fiji?

Most residencies in Fiji 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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