APPLICATIONS WERE OPEN UNTIL APR 4, 2024
A commissioning program for NYC-based, early-career artists

About Open Call

Born out of The Shed’s commitment to act as a platform for NYC-based, early-career artists* working in a range of artistic disciplines, Open Call selects, fosters, and presents new work. The program showcases a wide, multiborough range of voices, lived experiences, and perspectives, demonstrating the multitude of ways in which artists are working today. It embraces proposals for new works in disciplines including the visual arts, theater, dance, music, performance, spoken word, literary arts, film, fashion, art and technology, new media, social practice, and public art and architecture, as well as across multiple and new disciplines. As with all Shed civic programs, we center Black, POC, people with disabilities, and other communities that have been historically excluded and most impacted by structural racism and other forms of oppression.

For a list of past Open Call artists and more information about their commissions, please visit the main Open Call page.

Take your work to the next level by applying to Open Call’s fourth edition.

ABOUT THE APPLICATION AND SELECTION PROCESS

By decentralizing the curatorial voice within the selection process, which challenges the gatekeeping tendencies common to arts institutions, Open Call realizes The Shed’s civic mission to be truly of, by, and for New York City. As in the three previous iterations, participants for Open Call’s fourth edition will be selected by more than 50 independent leaders across all artistic fields, including artists, cultural programmers, curators, producers, academics, and members of The Shed’s program team. The selection will take place in summer 2024.

The Shed will support selected projects with a commissioning fee of up to $15,000 of producing stewardship per artist or collective.** Over the course of the Open Call program, each commission will be produced and designed in collaboration with The Shed’s artistic and production teams, who will work closely with each artist or collective throughout critical moments of the project’s development. This collaboration will include the creation of a customized plan that integrates accessibility into each piece. Additionally, in-kind presenting support managed by The Shed will go toward the implementation and installation of the work on-site, including artistic and production support outlined in detail on the application.

The selected projects will be presented in summer 2025 (visual art) and in 2026 (live performance) in various spaces at The Shed. All tickets to Open Call will be offered to the public for free. Along with the points of access created for each piece, these free tickets make the program accessible, welcoming, and inviting for all New Yorkers.

Applications to Open Call will be accepted via Submittable between Thursday, February 22 and Thursday, April 4, 2024 at 6 pm. There is no processing fee for The Shed’s Open Call application. Artists or collectives whose projects have been selected will be notified by early fall 2024 and will be publicly announced in fall 2024.

The call for proposals for the fourth edition of Open Call is organized by Tamara McCaw, Senior Advisor; Darren Biggart, Director of Civic Programs; Dejá Belardo, Assistant Curator, Visual Arts and Civic Programs; and Daisy Peele, Associate Producer.

The program was conceived by The Shed’s Artistic Director Alex Poots; Tamara McCaw, Senior Advisor and former Chief Civic Program Officer; Emma Enderby, former Chief Curator; and Senior Program Advisor Hans Ulrich Obrist.

*For The Shed, an early-career artist is one who has not yet received major support to create new work. We define major support as a range of opportunities, from the receipt of substantial institutional funding to presenting and/or producing opportunities at large-scale cultural organizations.

**Paid in installments associated with specified milestones

Information Sessions

This information session took place on Friday, March 8 at 11 am.

Learn about past commissions

The photos below offer a sampling of works by Open Call artists. To meet past artists and read more about the ideas behind their work, visit the In The Works page.
Installation view of works (left to right) by Luis A. Gutierrez, Jeffrey Meris, and Bryan Fernandez in the Open Call 2023 Group Exhibition, The Shed, New York, November 4, 2023 – January 21, 2024. Photo: Adam Reich.
Three gallery goers stand around a sculpture that hangs from the ceiling. It resembles a chandelier with long aluminum pipes bent upward gracefully. At the end of each pipe hangs an orchid in a ceramic pot. From the center of the sculpture, a string of LED light bulbs hangs to the ground.
Benjamin Akio Kimitch, Tiger Hands, 2022, performed as part of Open Call, The Shed, New York, August 6, 2022. Commissioned by The Shed. Photo: Heather Cromartie.
Three dancers in stand across a wide stage lit with a soft purple light. They are each mid gesture with arms extended out and above their heads. At the center, a dancer holds a sword above her head. In the background, a curtain is lit with a warm golden light.
z tye, The Available Bodies, 2022, performed as part of Open Call, The Shed, New York, August 12, 2022. Commissioned by The Shed. Photo: Heather Cromartie.
Nine Black trans performers stand on a stage wearing black suits and dresses in front of an audience. On the floor of the stage, two performers embrace as they roll together across the floor. Six of the standing performers have red tape reaching up from the ground to hold them in place.
AnAkA, AKTIV8 Archive Portal, 2021, performed in The Shed’s McCourt as part of Open Call, June 12, 2021. Commissioned by The Shed. Photo: Ahad Subzwari.
A performer stands on a round platform in the center of an audience, lit with purple and green spotlights. In the background, two video screens project a film of three people dancing.
Left to right: Emilie Gossiaux, True Love Will Find You in the End, 2021; Ayanna Dozier, Cities of the Dead, 2021; Tajh Rust, Passages, 2021. Part of the Open Call exhibition in The Shed’s Level 2 Gallery, June 4 – August 1, 2021. Commissioned by The Shed. Photo: Ronald Amstutz.
A gallery exhibition with two sculptures standing side by side, a film and photo installation on a red wall, and two glass and mirror panels facing each other.
Rachika Nayar, Our Hands Against the Dusk, 2021, performed in The Shed’s McCourt as part of Open Call, June 11, 2021. Commissioned by The Shed. Photo: Ahad Subzwari.
People seated in chairs at a distance from each other across a vast performance space. The space is foggy and atmospheric, lit by orange spotlights and pink fluorescent lights that form two Xs above a stage.
SHED_OPEN CALL_38.jpg
Ladi’Sasha Jones, Black Interior Space, 2021, workshop presented in The Shed’s Tisch Skylights as part of Open Call, June 12, 2021. Commissioned by The Shed. Photo: Ahad Subzwari.
Long tables arranged in rows with circular wooden blocks on them. Some tables have participants seated at them for a workshop centered on these blocks.
Left to right: Simon Liu, Devil’s Peak, 2021, and Pauline Shaw, The Tomb-Sweeper’s Mosquito Bite, 2021. Part of the Open Call exhibition in The Shed’s Level 2 Gallery, June 4 – August 1, 2021. Commissioned by The Shed. Photo: Ronald Amstutz.
Two artworks in a gallery. On the left, a triangular formation of three video screens hangs inside a circular area defined by heavy dark drapes. On the right in the background hangs a multicolored abstract felt tapestry.
Cindy Tran, screening and panel discussion for the film Sonnet Crown for NYC, 2021, presented in The Shed’s McCourt as part of “Open Call”, June 5, 2021. Commissioned by The Shed. Photo: Ahad Subzwari.
A line of seven panelists sit on a stage facing an audience with a film screen rising high above them in the background.
Aisha Amin, The Earth Has Been Made a Place of Prayer, 2021. Digital video, color, sound, 6 min., 42 sec., Islamic prayer mats. Part of the Open Call exhibition in the Level 2 Gallery. Commissioned by The Shed. Photo: Ronald Amstutz.
A scattering of people experiencing an artwork comprised of a square of red Islamic prayer mats on the ground and video screens in an X formation hanging above them projecting a film about a Brooklyn mosque.
Troy Anthony, The Revival: It Is Our Duty, 2021, performed in The Shed’s McCourt as part of Open Call, June 19, 2021. Commissioned by The Shed. Photo: Ahad Subzwari.
A piano and small black stage in the center of a large space with candles arranged in a circle around them. Performers line either side of the space with audience seated in shadow. A line of performers stands on a larger stage at the top of the space.
Nia O. Witherspoon, The Dark Girl Chronicles: Chronicle X, 2021, performed in The Shed’s McCourt as part of Open Call, June 3, 2021. Commissioned by The Shed. Photo: Ahad Subzwari.
A performer dressed in white with her back to the camera faces a line of performers on a stage in the background. The performance space is lit with a bright pale purple light.
DonChristian Jones, Volvo Truck, 2021, performed in The Shed’s McCourt as part of Open Call, June 17, 2021. Commissioned by The Shed. Photo: Ahad Subzwari.
A performance space lit in blue and purple spotlights. The lights illuminate vignettes including a beach chair and umbrella as well as a stage with makeup vanities lining it along the back.
Ana María Agüero Jahannes, Field Day, 2021, performed in The Shed’s McCourt as part of Open Call, June 26, 2021. Commissioned by The Shed. Photo: Ahad Subzwari.
A group of track-and-field athletes huddle in a circle with arms interlaced around each other's shoulders. They stand on a blue atlhletic mat.
Installation view of works (left to right) by Luis A. Gutierrez, Jeffrey Meris, and Bryan Fernandez in the Open Call 2023 Group Exhibition, The Shed, New York, November 4, 2023 – January 21, 2024. Photo: Adam Reich.

Frequently Asked Questions

Who can apply?

Open Call accepts applications from artists who are:

  • Early-career* artists and art collectives
  • 18+ years old
  • Currently living or working in New York City
  • Able to provide a W9 for payment
  • With or without a traditional arts degree and/or training
  • Working in a range of artistic disciplines, including the visual arts, theater, dance, music, performance, spoken word, literary arts, film, fashion, art and technology, new media, social practice, and public art and architecture, as well as across multiple and new disciplines
Who is considered an “early-career” artist?
For The Shed, an early-career artist is one who has not yet received major support to create new work. We define major support as a range of opportunities, from the receipt of substantial institutional funding to presenting and/or producing opportunities at large-scale cultural organizations. There is no age limitation.
Do I have to live in New York City to apply? What if I work in New York City but live somewhere else?
If you do not live in one of the five boroughs of New York City, but you work predominantly in NYC, your application will be considered. You will be asked to provide a New York City working address in your application.
We’re a group of collaborators. Can we apply as a collective and who does The Shed consider to be a collaborator?

Yes. In the Submittable application, you will be able to indicate if you are applying as an individual artist or a collective. For collectives, we are only able to accept a maximum of three members at this time.

Both individual artists and collectives can list up to three collaborators in their application. The Shed defines collaborators as those who are key to the early development of the work. For performance proposals, artists do not need to list all performers as collaborators. We understand that artists will refine the collaborative elements of their projects during the commissioning process.

Nonprofit or incorporated collectives are not eligible to apply. Only physical people are.

Can I submit more than one proposal?
For Open Call, we only accept one proposal per applicant (individual or collective). However, you can be listed as a collaborator in another lead artist’s proposal submission.
What kinds of proposals are you looking for?

In line with The Shed’s mission, the Open Call program values inventive and bold proposals that explore and question the urgent issues of our time. We look for submissions that are both idea-driven and poetic, and that can be feasibly realized. We encourage artists to be inclusive and equitable as they engage their ideas and communities with intellectual and aesthetic rigor. We aim to support New York City’s diversity of emerging talent in its many forms—including artistic medium, race, ethnicity, age, identity, disability, and other experiences.

Curatorial proposals, such as an individual or a collective of curators proposing a group exhibition, will not be accepted.

All eligible applications are reviewed by Open Call’s reviewers. Applications with the highest scores will then be reviewed during a panel discussion, resulting in the selection of a finalist pool. Some of the artists will be interviewed before final awarding. Through this review process, Open Call offers artists the opportunity to have their work and ideas considered and discussed by a range of experts across different artistic fields as well as The Shed’s staff. In terms of performing arts, evening-length pieces (60 minutes average running time) will be prioritized.

What are the selection criteria?

We use five criteria to select the projects:

Bold and inventive

  • The work is original and presents a unique vision or perspective.
  • It is innovative, idea driven, and thought-provoking.
  • It embraces risk-taking and experimentation.

Artistically rigorous

  • The proposal is coherent, thoughtful, and reflects a deep sense of inquiry.
  • It demonstrates a professional approach to process and presentation.
    The work samples demonstrate artistic excellence, mastery of skills and techniques.

Relevant and resonant

  • The proposal is timely, interesting, and thrilling.
  • It provides multiple entry points and strives for openness, avoiding a narrow and jargony approach.
  • The work is able to hold sustained impact and value for diverse audiences and viewers.

Feasible

  • The work demonstrates a scope and scale likely to be executed as proposed with the allocated resources.
  • The proposal budget is thoughtful, clear, and reasonable.

Demonstrates integrity

  • The work and artists seem responsible with ideas, concepts, and references, and avoid appropriation.
  • Artists demonstrate a just point of view, and a strong ethical approach to their work.
How does the selection process work?

Applications are at first reviewed to ensure they are complete (we might reach out if there is missing information). They are then assigned to at least three online reviewers each, of which at least two are discipline-specific. A diversity of perspectives is essential during this stage. We ensure that all proposals are also reviewed by at least one Shed staff member.

From that early online review, the top 150 proposals are selected to be discussed in a single multidisciplinary panel. This panel takes place live or online in a synchronous manner. All proposals are sent to panelists in advance for individual review and are then reviewed and discussed by panelists live.

At the end of the panel, a semifinalist list is determined, by order of interest. It is then up to The Shed’s staff to interview semifinalists, check their references, and do a feasibility study, as well as space assignment. All of this helps determine the final awardees.

Unfortunately, due to the amount of applications we expect to receive, we’re not able to provide application feedback.

When will work be selected, developed, and presented?
Application: Closes Thursday, April 4, 2024, at 11:59 pm
Online Review: April – May 2024
Panel Review: Summer 2024
Notification of Acceptance: Early fall 2024
Open Call Awardees Announcement: Fall 2024
Gallery Presentation: Summer 2025
Griffin Theater Presentations: Summer 2026
Where will work be presented?

All work will be presented at The Shed. The images in the slideshow above show a variety of presentation configurations in our building’s spaces.

As part of the application process, you will be prompted to suggest the space your project is designed for. However, The Shed’s team will be responsible for final space assignments once all projects are selected.

Visual artworks will be presented in a group exhibition in one of The Shed’s spaces, with works varying in scale and medium. Though we do not have specific size limitations for each work, nor restrictions on how they might be installed (works can be free-standing, hanging, wall-mounted, etc.), we encourage artists to be ambitious in their proposals while remaining mindful that other artworks will also inhabit the space. Footprints of sculptural works in the past have ranged in scale, falling mostly within a 20-by-20-foot area. Wall-mounted works have also varied in scale, occupying an area up to 20 feet wide on the wall. The group exhibition will be curated by The Shed’s curatorial team, and commissions will be developed in consultation with the visual arts team. To learn more about past Open Call exhibitions, please visit the 2023 exhibition page.

The Shed’s Plaza, an iconic public space, is formed when the building’s movable outer shell is nested to create a 17,000-square-foot outdoor plaza for large-scale performances. It can accommodate an audience of up to 1,500 (subject to New York City and State Covid guidelines and mandates) and pending availability, the Plaza may be considered for installation and/or performance projects. There will be a rain date scheduled in advance, and performances will be postponed to that date if it rains. To learn more about past Open Call works presented on the Plaza, please visit the 2019 Open Call: Group 3 page. In 2021 due to Covid restrictions, the Plaza was covered, and pieces were presented in a unique set up that will not be used in 2025 – 26.

The Griffin Theater, on Level 6, is a black box theater with resilient (not sprung) wood floors and reconfigurable raisers. It can be used as a proscenium-style performance space for audiences of about 200-400 attendees, with a stage roughly 40 feet wide by 20 feet deep with wings on each side, located on the west side of the theater. Pieces in The Griffin Theater will run for three consecutive performance dates. For that performance run, the space can be split into two smaller theaters with several possible floorplans. These floorplans will be designed with all of the works in mind, so the final layout will be determined collaboratively with the Open Call team. Both spaces allow for projections and professional lighting; various configurations may be possible, including both a proscenium/thrust setup and open-plan seating or immersive participatory pieces. To learn more about past Open Call works presented in The Griffin Theater, please visit the main Open Call page.

Pieces/artists usually get assigned to one space. There have been cases of artists showing work throughout spaces, or performing arts showing in the gallery. This will be considered on a case-by-case basis.

For social practice projects, where the process might be centered on and the project might take place in community, the Shed presentation will be analyzed and defined on a case-by-case basis.

Is The Shed/Open Call accessible?

The Shed aims to reduce disparities in New York’s cultural ecology through equity, inclusion, and access. Artists with disabilities are encouraged to apply to Open Call.

The Open Call Submittable Form is accessible to screen readers. All Open Call information sessions will include live captioning, ASL interpretation, and audio descriptions.

All of The Shed’s spaces are wheelchair accessible. ASL interpretation, assistive listening devices, captioning, and verbal descriptions may be provided during the development of work and will be available during Open Call presentations for designated performances, exhibition pieces as needed, and special gallery tours.

Please email our Open Call team at opencall@theshed.org with further questions, comments, or any specific requests. Read more about accessibility at The Shed.

How should I complete the budget template included in the application?

An itemized budget template is provided as part of the application and must be completed with every type of expense you expect the project to include. There’s space for additional funding and additional costs; please include everything you may need to realistically and feasibly realize your project.

Some items to include are already noted, such as artist and collaborator fees, designers, production support, stage managers, art supplies, fabrication costs, rehearsal and/or studio space as needed, color/audio correction as needed, set and costumes, administration costs, specific production materials, and any extra equipment specific to the piece that is not part of The Shed’s inventory (beyond regular AV/projection equipment). VR/AR headsets, or even noise canceling headsets, are not included in The Shed’s inventory and will need to be provided by the artist. Because every project is different and we don’t know what you’ll require, please feel free to add any line items as needed. Artists may need to conduct independent research to include actual costs. Suggested lead artist fees range from $1,500 – 2,000 depending on the project. The W.A.G.E. website offers a good resource for suggested creative/production fees broken down by category.

Two-way trucking at the time of the performance/installation/deinstallation will be covered by The Shed, from and to one location in the five boroughs of New York City. Parking in the area for meetings or during the performance is not covered by The Shed.

We do not suggest you plan on self-raising more than 15 percent over the $15,000. If you do have some support that exceeds that number, you’re able to include it.

Do artists need to budget for insurance?
No. The Shed will provide general liability insurance.
What can I use the awarded commissioning fee for?

The Shed will support Open Call projects with a commissioning fee of up to $15,000 per artist or collective, paid in installments linked to project milestones.

This commissioning fee is intended to support the development and realization of the work, which includes artist and collaborator fees, fabrication costs, art supplies, rehearsal and/or studio space as needed, administration costs, costumes and other production materials, and any extra equipment specific to the piece that is not part of The Shed’s inventory. Suggested lead artist fees range from $1,500 – 2,000 depending on the project. Lead awarded artists will contract and pay collaborators themselves.

Additionally, The Shed will provide in-kind presenting support for implementation and installation of the work on-site, including crew labor, design coordinator fees, and specific rentals among other considerations.

No other revenue will be assigned to the artists. Tickets are offered to the public for free, and no merchandise can be sold at The Shed.

The Shed cannot actively help with garnering extra financial support, although we can sometimes act as a fiscal sponsor and can also write letters of recommendation/intention as needed.

What can be considered as samples of past and future work?

Examples of past work samples include photo, audio, video, and print documentation.

Examples of future work samples may include select drawings, sketches, rehearsal or work-in-progress presentations, audio and/or video documentation, and renderings, etc. that best represent your idea. For performing arts proposals, we suggest audio and/or moving images. For visual arts proposals, still images work well.

Audio and video files should be no longer than one minute. Written samples have a limit of three pages. Text documents uploaded that include links to files will not be considered.

Am I able to submit Vimeo or YouTube videos of my work?
Unfortunately, our application requires a direct upload of artist work samples. However, there is an opportunity to link to your website, if you have one.
How should visual descriptions included with the application be written?

Visual descriptions provide information about the visual appearance of spaces, objects, people, and more to reviewers and panelists who are blind or have low vision. They are plain text descriptions of images, gifs, videos, and other media.

When writing visual descriptions, consider adding features such as colors, medium, placement of objects, names of people, clothes, animals, emotions, and environments. If your media has text in it, consider writing out the image text verbatim and be sure to use proper spelling, capitalization, spacing, and grammar.

I recently sent in my application but realized I did not include image examples of my proposed project. Is it too late since I submitted already?
Any requests for revisions to applications should be sent to opencall@theshed.org. We will review these on a case-by-case basis.
If work has been shown elsewhere, can it be considered a new commission?

Some projects may have been shown in the past, for example in school, a work-in-progress showing, or included in a public program like a reading or workshop. In the Submittable application, you will be prompted to explain how your project would transform in The Shed’s presentation and how your proposed work or any its components have been shared in the past in any form.

We are looking for new work but understand that each artist has different development processes, with moments of public showing and feedback as part of them.

Does all the work involved in the project have to be original content?
Yes. In the case of using existing content, you need to ensure that such use does not infringe on the rights of any third party and shall be responsible for securing any third party rights to material that is not original to you or not in the public domain.
Can the work premiere elsewhere before I present at The Shed?

As this is a commissioning program, we ask that artists agree to premiere their commissioned work at The Shed.

As for exclusivity clauses, we have tended to avoid them. Though, we do request that you don’t present similar work in New York City two weeks before your Shed presentation, mostly with the intention of ensuring you’ll have an audience for your presentation as part of Open Call.

As a Shed commission, who owns the copyright to the work?
Copyright of the work will always belong to the artist. The Shed only keeps the right to present it and share it in perpetuity on its website, social media, etc.
What team/collaborators should I foresee needing to assemble?

This depends on each medium and project, but some collaborators to consider include directors, producers, stage managers, designers (lighting, space, audio, graphic, print), editors, dramaturgs, musicians, carpenters, playwrights, cast members, composers, choreographers, vocal coaches, song writers, and videographers. You don’t have to have a full team at the time of the application, but ideally you’ll consider them when building your project budget. As a team we can help you define which roles will be helpful and even recommend names as needed.

Collaborators do not need to be NYC-based, but you will need to secure any transportation and lodging costs for your team.

Who should I choose for my references?

References will only be contacted in the case your proposal is chosen as a semi-finalist project, right before the final selection.

You should include someone you’ve worked with, collaborated with, trained with, etc. in the past, who knows you and your work and can speak about it. Ideally, they should have an institutional role or some recognition in the field.

How will the development of the pieces be supported?

Over the course of the Open Call program, each commission will be developed, designed, and produced in collaboration with The Shed’s team. You should expect your project to change and evolve in collaboration with the institution. We expect you to dream big (yet feasibly), and then it will be up to our collaborative efforts to adapt your vision to the space, time, and resources available for each work.

Our curatorial, producing, and production teams will work closely with each artist or collective throughout critical moments of the project’s development, creating a customized plan that integrates accessibility into each piece.

We have incorporated mandatory work-in-progress showings throughout the development of the pieces, as well as specific fabrication milestones, customized to each individual piece and process.

Do you provide documentation of the work and how can it be used afterwards?
We provide professional photography and simple one-camera video documentation of all works. Part of our support to artists is to provide these assets for non-commercial use, with the inclusion of the photographer/videographer’s credit line and a courtesy line for The Shed/Open Call.
Who should I contact if I have questions?
For general questions about Open Call or application materials, please email opencall@theshed.org. For questions about using Submittable, please contact the Submittable help desk.
In The Works

Thank you to our partners

The Sponsor of Open Call is
Support for Open Call is generously provided by

Additional support for Open Call is provided by The Wescustogo Foundation and Jody and John Arnhold | Arnhold Foundation.

The creation of new work at The Shed is generously supported by the Lizzie and Jonathan Tisch Commissioning Fund and the Shed Commissioners. Major support for live productions at The Shed is provided by the Charina Endowment Fund, with additional support from the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature.

The Shed is connected by