The Alliance’s resource library offers articles, publications and presentations on the field of residencies, for those running residencies as well as researchers, funders and artists looking for information on the field. The library also includes resources on international exchange, for artists and residency dministrators in the U.S. and abroad.
Artists' Communities: A Directory of Residencies That Offer Time and Space for Creativity (3rd Edition)

The 3rd Edition of this widely-praised directory has been revised and updated to include an introduction by Robert MacNeil, an index of 347 residency pportunities worldwide, and comprehensive details on 95 residency centers, including:
Learn MoreThe Ultimate Residency Resource Guide
With more than 600 pages of newly compiled information, The URRG offers the essential tools needed for artists’ residencies to function at a highly professional level.
Learn MoreDual Citizenship: Artists Residencies in the US and Abroad
As if running a nonprofit organization and an artists’ residency program weren’t challenging enough, several organizations have set up shop in both the US and abroad, programming across borders, languages and cultures, as a sort of dual citizenship for artists’ communities. For these organizations, managing a double identity in the US and abroad reflects their commitment to celebrating and understanding both the intersections and divergences between cultures, through the art, artists, and local communities that form the fabric of each organization.
The Convergence of Art & Science
An increasing view of artists and scientists as equal partners, where neither discipline is compromised, is an exciting development in the residency field. It is this search for balance that has drawn so many to the convergence of science and art. “This growing and global movement has…taken on an increasingly collaborative eco-activist agenda as well as a visually stunning and celebratory one…. Addressing the world’s problems will require creative and inspiring collaborations between people, places and creatures.”
Artists’ Communities Make Case for Public Worth
In May 2005, the Board of Selectmen in Peterborough, New Hampshire, said they had doubts about The MacDowell Colony’s eligibility for the charitable property tax exemption defined by state law, beginning a two-year legal battle that resulted in a court decision in March 2007 in favor of the Colony. While the case began as an issue of property tax exemption, the lawsuit raised much larger questions: What public good is served by residencies, both for society at large and for local communities? And how can a retreat-style residency -- one that provides visiting artists with seclusion from the public -- demonstrate its value to the community?