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The Patricia Valian Reser Center for the Creative Arts (PRAx) at Oregon State University is dedicated to supporting many forms of creative work and connecting people and ideas across disciplines. 

PRAx and its affiliate organizations, Spring Creek Project and Center for the Humanities, create and manage residencies and fellowships at the intersections of arts, humanities, science and technology. We also manage the application process for the Polar STEAM Antarctic Artists & Writers Program.

Our opportunities take many shapes — from unplugged solo retreats in the woods to collaborative projects in research labs, field stations and interdisciplinary settings. Some programs are designed for OSU students or faculty, and some are national open calls. Whatever the scope, we work with each resident or fellow to co-create an experience that is supportive and generative.

Whether you are a musician or visual artist fascinated by the idea of long-term engagement with a science or engineering lab, a writer craving a couple of weeks at a quiet cabin, or a humanities scholar wanting to bring together a dream team of collaborators, we invite you to browse our opportunities, explore our residency locations, and learn about our initiatives to find opportunities that meet your needs. 

Our open submissions are listed below. 

The Public Lands Collaborative Residency supports creative teams engaged in storytelling projects that have the potential to help re-imagine and shape the future of public lands in the United States.  

Rooted in the belief that storytelling is a powerful tool for stewardship, the residency offers space, time, and financial support for residents to develop a project about public lands that leads to public engagements such as readings, publications, workshops, or collaborative community projects.   

 

America’s public lands span more than 600 million acres of mountains, deserts, forests, and shorelines. From iconic National Parks to remnant prairies, from beloved recreation areas to critically important wildlife refuges, these lands are one of the largest shared experiments in collective stewardship on Earth. 

Public lands remind us that democracy extends beyond human communities to include the soils, waters, and species with whom we share this continent. These lands are living systems and civic institutions, shaped by the push and pull between conservation and exploitation, recreation and restoration, and legacies of dispossession and the promise of shared stewardship. In this ever-shifting context, every trail, forest, and canyon can become a site of negotiation and debate. The stakes are high.  

In a time of ecological and cultural transformation, these lands call us to rethink stewardship — not as ownership or control, but as an ongoing conversation across generations, disciplines, and cultures. Public lands invite questions about who belongs, who decides, and what values guide our shared future.  

During the Public Lands Collaborative Residency, we invite residents to explore questions like: How does caring for the land reflect how we care for one another? How does caring for and managing these lands reflect who we are and who we aspire to be? How do public lands shape our cultural identity and our sense of what is possible in a changing world? How can collaborative inquiry across disciplines help us imagine alternative futures for public lands? 

The residency takes place at a cabin on a 70-acre nature reserve that reflects a long-standing commitment to shared stewardship. Residents are invited to be in relationship with the land as both refuge and inquiry site while they reflect, ask questions, and shape their collaborative work.  

 

Eligibility

The Public Lands Collaborative Residency is open to interdisciplinary collaborative pairs. One person in the pair must be a creative writer. The other person in the pair may be: 

  • An artist working in any discipline (e.g., visual arts, performing arts, sound, etc.) 
  • Someone working in the humanities (e.g., historian, philosopher, theologian) 
  • Someone working in ecology or a related science field 
  • Another writer working in a different field or genre (e.g., a creative nonfiction writer working with a poet, a fiction writer working with a policy writer, etc.)

The pair must demonstrate a work trajectory that addresses environmental issues or involves place-based inquiry, either through previous solo or collaborative projects.

We encourage applications from people whose work is informed by lived experience, cultural knowledge, or long-term engagement with place, including Indigenous, rural, and historically underrepresented communities. Applicants must be based in the U.S. and at least 18 years old at the time of application. 

 

Residency Offerings 

Selected residents will receive: 

  • Exclusive use of the Cabin at Shotpouch Creek for up to three weeks from August 2026 to September 2027. The residency can be consecutive (i.e., three full weeks) or broken into shorter stays (e.g., three residencies of one week each). While most of these stays should include overlapping residency time with both collaborators present (the space has two bedrooms), some days may be split between the pair. For instance, two weeks might be completed together, but each resident might complete a third week solo. 
  • Please read about the Cabin at Shotpouch Creek to make sure the space works for your collaboration.  
  • An honorarium of $3,000 per recipient, which may be used to cover travel costs to the Cabin at Shotpouch Creek during the residency period(s) and travel to Corvallis for the public event.  
  • Professional documentation of outcomes and promotional support for related events.   
  • A culminating opportunity for public presentation at PRAx at Oregon State University (e.g., participation in an exhibition, reading, performance).  
  • Additional funding for shipping artwork to PRAx for an exhibition if needed.  

 

Terms & expectations 

Residents are expected to: 

  • Develop a creative storytelling project related to public lands during the residency year. 
  • Schedule and complete residency time at the Cabin at Shotpouch Creek within the award period. 
  • Participate in a public program, exhibition, or presentation at PRAx between September 2028 and June 2029.  
  • Acknowledge Spring Creek Project and PRAx in public presentations and publications related to the residency.  
  • Provide their own transportation to the cabin, which is not accessible by public transportation. 

 

Program and Application Dates 

  • Application deadline: May 15, 2026 
  • Notification of acceptance: June 15, 2026  
  • Residency period: August 2026 – October 2027. Residencies at the Cabin at Shotpouch Creek.  
  • Public presentation at PRAx:  Between September 2028 and June 2029 (Exact dates TBD) 

 

How to Apply 

Applications are due May 15, 2026. Choose one collaborator to be the primary applicant and to submit one application for the collaborative pair.  If you have questions, contact residencies.prax@oregonstate.edu. 

 

Review & Selection 

A diverse panel composed of artists, writers, scientists and arts professionals will evaluate applications based on selection criteria that include:  

  • Quality and strength of work samples 
  • Demonstrated trajectory of work engaging environmental issues or place-based inquiry 
  • Likelihood that the residency will result in work that engages communities in thinking about public lands. 

Final selections will reflect a balance of disciplines, perspectives, and approaches. 

Sponsors & Co-sponsors 

This program is supported by the Spring Creek Project.  

 

A celebration of all the lives around us on the OSU Corvallis campus. 

Every day, thousands of lives unfold across Oregon State University’s campus. A hawk circles above the quad. Moss spreads slowly along a shaded wall. Pollinators move between blossoms in campus gardens. Campus Wild invites us to notice these neighbors—to slow down, look closely, and creatively respond to the more-than-human world that shares this place.  

 

How to Participate

Choose a living being on OSU’s Corvallis campus—tree, bird, insect, fungus, flower, fern, lichen, spider, mammal, or any other organism, large or small. Spend time observing it. Then, create a response inspired by your encounter. Your submission may take the form of: 

  • Poetry (up to 40 lines) 
  • Prose (up to 250 words) 
  • A field guide entry (up to 250 words + a sketch or an image) 
  • Visual art (one original painting, drawing, etc.) 
  • Photography  
  • Video or audio work (up to 2 minutes) 

Your work might explore attention, coexistence, ecological change, beauty, curiosity, or imagination, or it might simply introduce us to a notable neighbor. There is no single right approach — only the invitation to look closely and respond. Note: please submit only original work. Artwork generated by publicly available AI tools is not accepted. 

 

Who Can Participate? 

Everyone is welcome to participate: students, faculty, staff, and community members. No prior experience in art or science is required—only curiosity, attention, and a willingness to experiment. 

 

Submissions Due May 4

Send us your work by May 4. You'll complete a brief form and upload your file in one of the six categories listed above. Please keep to the requested length and duration limits. A $100 prize will be awarded to one OSU student in each category. Honorable mentions will be awarded in each category for student and non-student submissions. Submissions will be evaluated based on creativity and the depth of observation reflected in the work. 

 

Celebrate Our Wild Campus  

Join us on Wednesday, June 3 at 5:30 p.m. at PRAx to celebrate our wild campus. Student awardees and additional selected works will be honored at the Campus Wild Celebration.  

 

The Redcedar Fellowship is an advanced, two-year program for alumni of the Long-Term Ecological Reflections residency and fellowship programs who are interested in sustained, long-term inquiry at the H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest. Grounded in the program’s 200- year vision, the fellowship supports creative and scholarly work that unfolds over extended periods of time and in ongoing relationship with place, ecological research, and evolving questions. Applicants will propose a continuation of an existing Andrews-based project or a new direction that requires repeated return visits to the forest. In either case, the proposed project invites deepening collaboration with researchers and patient attention to ecological change across seasons and years. In addition to developing new work, Redcedar Fellows commit to public engagement activities that share their evolving insights with diverse audiences, contributing to a living record of ecological reflection shaped by long-term presence, humility before deep time, and intergenerational exchange.

 

 

Eligibility

The Redcedar Fellowship is available to alumni of the Long-Term Ecological Reflections program. To be eligible, applicants must have completed all of the following:

  • An awarded residency or fellowship at the H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest
  • At least one previous Andrews-based project (e.g., a magazine article, a book chapter, poems, audio composition, visual art, etc.)
  • At least one public engagement featuring their Andrews work (e.g., an artist talk, reading, workshop, exhibition, interview or public conversation)

 

 

Offerings

Redcedar Fellowships are two years. The fellowship includes a $4,000 honorarium and up to four weeks of lodging at the Andrews. Residency stays may be split into multiple blocks of time. Honorarium funds should cover travel to the Andrews for each visit.

Spring Creek Project will also:

  • Cover the cost of lodging at the Andrews through direct payment to the Andrews.
  • Facilitate opportunities to connect with scientists at the Andrews.
  • Help coordinate and promote a presentation or event connected with their creative work or project near the end of the fellowship.

 

 

Terms & Expectations

  • These residencies are intended to provide concentrated time for work that promises to contribute to explorations of human relationships with the rest of the natural world. Residents are expected to engage with the forest and to create new work inspired by their experience. Work may relate to a previous Reflections residency or take a new direction.
  • Residents will participate in a public engagement activity (e.g., an event, workshop, reading, or exhibition) to share their work with a wider audience.
  • During each year of the fellowship, by September 30, residents are asked to provide a 1- to 2-page letter describing project updates and their continuing engagement with the forest.
  • Residents are asked to acknowledge the support of the Spring Creek Project and H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest in any relevant publication, performance, or exhibition.

 

 

Program and Application Dates

Applications are accepted once per year. Key dates for 2026 are as follows:

  • Application deadline: May 15, 2026
  • Notification of status: June 15, 2026
  • Fellowship period: October 2026 – September 2028

 

 

Review & Selection  Applications will be reviewed by a committee of writers, artists, and scholars familiar with the Long-Term Ecological Reflections program. The selection committee will consider the following when reviewing proposals:

  • Depth of engagement with place - Evidence of sustained, thoughtful relationship with the H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest and an intention to return repeatedly over time.
  • Commitment to long-term inquiry - Proposals that demonstrate patience, openness to uncertainty, an understanding that insight may emerge gradually across seasons or years, and the role of creative and scholarly work in shaping long- term understanding of forest ecosystems and human relationships with them.
  • Integration with ecological research - Clear plans for meaningful engagement with Andrews researchers and long-term ecological studies, informed by curiosity rather than predetermined outcomes.
  • Evolution of creative or scholarly practice - Quality and promise of a proposed project that either extends, deepens, or meaningfully reorients previous Andrews-based work in response to ongoing reflection and experience, or initiates a new direction of inquiry grounded in ongoing reflection, experience, and sustained engagement with the H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest.
  • Contribution to the living record - Commitment to public engagement activities that share work-in-process and evolving insights with diverse audiences, recognizing dissemination as part of a long-term conversation rather than a final product.

 

This program is sponsored by the Spring Creek Project in partnership with the H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest. If you have questions, contact Joy Jensen: joy.jensen@oregonstate.edu.

The Nurse Log Fund is a program for alumni of the Long-Term Ecological Reflections Residency program who are seeking support to further develop projects initiated during their residency and/or to share that work with broader audiences.  

Named for fallen trees that sustain new growth, Nurse Log recognizes that ideas shaped by close attention to place and long-term ecological inquiry continue to evolve well beyond the residency period.  

Awards of up to $1,500 may be used to support project development or dissemination.  

 

Project development includes:  

  • Materials for a creative project 
  • Production of project-related media (e.g., a podcast, video, or audio recording)  
  • Indexing, imaging permissions, or subventions for books under contract 
  • Trainings to support research, scholarship, or teaching 
  • Archival research 
  • Supplemental conference registration or travel that is directly related to your project 

 

Project dissemination includes:  

  • Public events (e.g., venue rental cost, travel, marketing) 
  • Exhibitions (e.g., printing, framing, shipping) 
  • Performances (e.g., supplemental funding to support production) 
  • Travel to conferences and other professional venues to present your HJA work 

 

Please note that awards cannot be used for equipment such as computers, cameras or recording devices.  

 

Eligibility 

Nurse Log funding is available to alumni of the Long-Term Ecological Reflections program, including visiting artists, writers and scholars. Eligible applicants will have completed an awarded residency or fellowship at the H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest.  

If you’ve been awarded Nurse Log funding in the past, you may apply again, but reviewers will prioritize applicants who have not yet received this award. 

 

Offerings 

Recipients will receive a direct payment of up to $1,500 to support the development or dissemination of work directly related to the Long-Term Ecological Reflections program. You will have the opportunity to summarize costs for the funding request in your application.  

 

Terms & Expectations 

  • If your work includes public engagement such as a reading, event or exhibition, please share the details and date(s) of that event so Spring Creek Project can help promote it. 
  • Submit a one-page overview of how the funding supported the development or dissemination of your work within a month of completion.  
  • If applicable, submit your work to be included in The Forest Log.

 

Program and Application Dates 

  • May 15: Application deadline.
  • June 15: All applicants notified of status.

This program will accept applications for funding once per academic term—in the fall, winter, and spring. If you have questions, contact Joy Jensen at joy.jensen@oregonstate.edu. 

 

Review & Selection 

Applications will be reviewed by the Spring Creek Project. Selection will prioritize projects that most closely align with the mission of Long-Term Ecological Reflections and that reflect the broadest potential reach and impact. 

 

A PLAYA + PRAx + Spring Creek Project Fellowship

PLAYA, PRAx and Spring Creek Project are partnering to offer Migration in Changing Climates, a new interdisciplinary fellowship.

This fellowship invites applicants working in writing, ethics and philosophy, visual art, performing arts, sound and multidisciplinary genres to propose projects that engage migration as an ecological, cultural, ethical and imaginative force reshaping where and how life can move. Fellowship projects will explore ecologies of migration in the Pacific Northwest and Great Basin, including human and other-than-human lives. The fellowship will begin with an orientation at PLAYA, with a case study of migration in the high desert of Lake County, Oregon.  

PLAYA is located on the Pacific Flyway, a critical migratory corridor where millions of birds depend on a chain of desert lakes, wetlands, scrub and uplands for survival. From American Avocet to Wilson's Phalarope to Pronghorn and Mule Deer, here along the northern edge of the Great Basin, movement has been a constant. Over the past 70 years, shrinking wetlands, intensifying drought, habitat fragmentation and rising temperatures have upset an age-old balance. Migratory corridors used for millennia have been disrupted, leading to diminished resources and increased challenges.

The year-long program will bring eight selected fellows together to develop creative projects that engage with the living dynamics of migration — of birds, mammals, plants, and/or people — across landscapes undergoing rapid change in the Pacific Northwest and Great Basin. We seek projects that are attentive to place, grounded in observation and inquiry, and open to evoking dialogue — work that can hold complexity, uncertainty, and wonder in a world on the move. We invite fellows to explore questions such as: 

  • How do migratory beings navigate changing climates, fragmented landscapes, and disrupted habitats?
  • What happens when traditional migration routes no longer function?
  • What are the ethical, cultural, and emotional dimensions of migration?
  • What might migration by other animals, plants, fungi and microorganisms teach humans about resilience, vulnerability, and belonging?
  • What responsibilities arise when human-driven changes force displacement across species? 

 

As a cohort, during the four-night (October 1-5, 2026) orientation and residency at PLAYA on the edge of Summer Lake, fellows will connect with scientists and land stewards who have expertise in migration. We will come together for field excursions, expert presentations, and informal conversations over dinner to share knowledge, perspectives, and inspiration.

After the program orientation, fellows will schedule an individual residency at PLAYA to deepen and expand their creative work about migration over the next year. With the help of PRAx and PLAYA, fellows will also connect with research and researchers that might inform this work. The fellowship will culminate with public programming at PRAx at Oregon State University, where work will be presented between September 2028 and June 2028. 

 

PLAYA, Spring Creek Project and PRAx bring a tradition of integrating the arts, humanities, and sciences to illuminate environmental change and our ethical relationship to the natural world. Together these programs offer a setting where creative inquiry, ecological knowledge, and lived experience can meet — supporting work that helps us imagine new ways of understanding migration, not only as a biological process, but as a shared story of survival, adaptation, and interdependence.

 

Residency Details

Please review the PLAYA 2026 Know Before You Go Handbook to determine if a residency at PLAYA is for you.

 

Eligibility

The Migration in Changing Climates Fellowship is open to both established and emerging artists working in any medium or genre (visual, music/sound, literary, journalism, video, interdisciplinary, new media, etc.). A work trajectory that addresses environmental issues or involves place-based inquiry is expected.

Individual and collaborative applications of up to two people are welcome. If applying collaboratively, each person in the collaboration must apply individually and include the name of the collaborator in the space provided. Applicants must be able to participate in the full five-day cohort residency at PLAYA (October 1–5, 2026) and commit to engaging in the year-long fellowship program (October 2026-November 2027). Applicants must be based in the U.S. and at least 18 years old at the time of application.

We encourage applications from individuals whose work is informed by lived experience, cultural knowledge, or long-term engagement with place, including Indigenous, rural, and historically underrepresented communities.

 

Residency Offerings

Selected fellows will receive:

  • A four-night cohort residency and orientation at PLAYA. Lodging and meals provided.
  • An additional individual residency at PLAYA, during one of PLAYA’s Art/Sci Awarded Residency dates. Typical residencies are at least 11 nights from January-March, July - August or November. During these individual residencies, PLAYA provides private living and studio spaces, one group meal per week, and access to the surrounding high desert landscape. 
  • An honorarium of $3,000 per fellow, which may be used to cover travel costs to PLAYA for the initial cohort residency, a subsequent individual residency, and travel to Corvallis for the exhibition opening event.
  • Opportunities to engage with scientists, land stewards, and migration experts.
  • Professional documentation of projects.
  • A culminating opportunity for public presentation at PRAx at Oregon State University (e.g., an exhibition, a reading, or a performance).
  • Additional funding for shipping artwork to PRAx for an exhibition if needed.

 

Terms & expectations

Fellows are expected to:

  • Participate fully in the four-night cohort residency at PLAYA.
  • Actively engage with the cohort, staff, and invited collaborators in a spirit of inquiry and respect.
  • Develop a creative project related to migration in a changing climate over the fellowship year.
  • Schedule and complete individual residency time at PLAYA within the fellowship period, and per PLAYA’s Art/Sci Awarded Residency schedule.
  • Participate in a public program, exhibition, or presentation at PRAx between September 2028 and June 2029.
  • Acknowledge PLAYA, Spring Creek Project and PRAx in public presentations and publications related to the fellowship.

 

Program & Application Dates

  • Application deadline: May 15, 2026
  • References deadline: May 31, 2026
  • Notification of status:  By July 1, 2026
  • Opening retreat at PLAYA: October 1-5, 2026
  • Residency period: October 2026 – November 2027
  • Individual PLAYA Residency: Residencies can be scheduled from January-March, July - August and November. Please plan to stay for at least 11 nights. 
  • Public presentation at PRAx: Between September 2028 and June 2029 (Exact dates TBD)

 

How to Apply

Applications are due May 15, 2026. The deadline for the two required reference forms is May 31. References should be selected who can speak to your ability to function in a remote, self-directed environment and in community with others. If you have questions about the application process, contact residencies.prax@oregonstate.edu. 

 

Review & Selection

A diverse panel composed of artists, writers, scientists and arts professionals will evaluate applications based on these criteria:

  • Quality and strength of work samples
  • Connection of previous work with the missions of PLAYA and the Spring Creek Project through demonstrated environmental focus or place-based inquiry.
  • Likelihood that the fellowship will result in work that engages and evokes dialogue about migration.

Final selections will reflect a balance of disciplines, perspectives, and approaches.

 

Reading groups provide the opportunity to bring colleagues together to discuss ideas and create intellectual community. A reading group might also help lay the groundwork for a future collaborative project like developing an interdisciplinary team; drafting a grant proposal; drafting a paper or a book proposal; or planning an exhibition or a speaker series.

We encourage proposals that include creative, cross-disciplinary collaborations and/or offer means of engagement with critical issues. 

Inspiration and Ideas: 

  • A monthly reading group with faculty across campus to discuss entomology, ethics and art. 
  • A weekly reading group with faculty and graduate students to develop the framework for a proposal on oral histories of the Willamette River.  
  • A quarterly book group to explore new research in material cultures.

Eligibility: 

  • Oregon State University faculty working in the arts and humanities are invited to apply.
  • Participation in the group is open to OSU faculty, staff and students as well as colleagues affiliated with other institutions.  

What we Offer: 

  • $500 for the organizing faculty member to support their time and/or purchase supplies for your group + space in PRAx (if available) to host your meetings for a period of up to a year after award. 

Terms & Expectations: 

  • The group convener will handle all logistics and will provide a report on the group’s activity and progress within one year of award. 

Program & Application Dates: 

  • Applications are due the Monday of week four in Fall, Winter, and Spring terms. Applicants will be contacted by the end of week 8. 

The Arts and Humanities Opportunity Fund provides flexible support for faculty research and creative activities in the arts and humanities. Awards are designed to cover a wide range of projects at any point in the research process.

Small awards are those up to $1,500, while large awards fall between $1,501 and $10,000. Possible uses are outlined below, and we welcome proposals that speak to other faculty research and creative practice needs, as well. Please note that expenses related to course development and travel are typically funded at the school level or through campus-wide programs such as e-campus, DPO, WIC and the CTL.  


Eligibility:

  • Awards are available to all faculty working on arts and humanities projects who are employed at .5FTE or higher.


Award Offerings: 

  • Small awards, up to $1,500, may cover needs such as indexing, imaging permissions, or subventions for books under contract; book manuscript workshops; materials for a creative project; trainings to support research, scholarship, or teaching; archival research, or supplemental conference registration or travel.  
  • Large awards, $1,501 - $10,000 are designed for projects with wider impacts, such as developing or hosting a conference or workshop on campus; developing and hosting an event connected to your scholarship; hiring a research assistant; or developing an exhibit connected to your artistic project.  


Terms & Expectations:

  • PRAx will transfer funds to the recipient’s academic unit for disbursement. 
  • Recipients of large grants will submit a 1-to 2-page report at the end of the activity describing how the funds supported their project.


Program & Application Dates:

  • Applications are due by the Monday of Week 4 during Fall, Winter, and Spring terms. Applicants will be notified of status by the end of Week 8.  


Review & Selection: 

Applications will be evaluated by a diverse review committee composed of faculty with experience working across the arts and humanities. Reviewers will consider:  

  • The feasibility of the project and alignment with the goals of the faculty member, school and university.  
  • Prospective significance of the project’s impact. 
  • Centrality of arts and/or humanities methods and practices to the project.