Marquez-Barrios Awarded Fellowship at Artists’ Residency
Victor Marquez-Barrios was recently awarded a fellowship by the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts. He will be among approximately 22 fellows focusing on their own creative projects at this working retreat for visual artists, writers and composers.
VCCA is a unique Virginia-based organization of national stature and international impact. One of the largest year-round artist residency programs, VCCA typically hosts more than 400 artist-fellows annually at its Mt. San Angelo facility in Amherst, Virginia, and 50 annually at the Moulin à Nef in Auvillar, France. VCCA has been a wellspring of music, literature and the visual arts, providing residencies for artists during the most important and the least supported phase of their work – the creative phase.
A typical residency ranges from two weeks to two months. Each artist is provided with a private bedroom, a private studio and three prepared meals a day. This distraction-free atmosphere, as well as the energy that results from having multiple creative people gathered in one place, enable artists to be highly productive.
The artists who come to VCCA, whether emerging or established, are selected through competitive peer review on the basis of the important or innovative work they are doing in their respective fields. Since its founding in 1971, VCCA has hosted more than 5,900 writers, visual artists and composers. VCCA Fellows have received worldwide attention including MacArthur fellowships, Pulitzer Prizes, Guggenheim fellowships, National Endowment for the Arts awards, the National Book Award, Grammy Awards and Academy Award nominations.
VCCA is a unique Virginia-based organization of national stature and international impact. One of the largest year-round artist residency programs, VCCA typically hosts more than 400 artist-fellows annually at its Mt. San Angelo facility in Amherst, Virginia, and 50 annually at the Moulin à Nef in Auvillar, France. VCCA has been a wellspring of music, literature and the visual arts, providing residencies for artists during the most important and the least supported phase of their work – the creative phase.
A typical residency ranges from two weeks to two months. Each artist is provided with a private bedroom, a private studio and three prepared meals a day. This distraction-free atmosphere, as well as the energy that results from having multiple creative people gathered in one place, enable artists to be highly productive.
The artists who come to VCCA, whether emerging or established, are selected through competitive peer review on the basis of the important or innovative work they are doing in their respective fields. Since its founding in 1971, VCCA has hosted more than 5,900 writers, visual artists and composers. VCCA Fellows have received worldwide attention including MacArthur fellowships, Pulitzer Prizes, Guggenheim fellowships, National Endowment for the Arts awards, the National Book Award, Grammy Awards and Academy Award nominations.
Marquez-Barrios was the recipient of one of VCCA’s 50th Anniversary Fellowships, which means his residency there is fully funded.