ENOSBURG, VT.- Cold Hollow Sculpture Park, an outdoor sculpture park and nonprofit arts organization dedicated to fostering connections between contemporary art, nature, and community, is pleased to announce the return of its beloved Artists-in-Residence (AIR) program for the 2026 season, welcoming artists Constance Jaquay and Ed Woodham for immersive residencies that invite creative exploration, public engagement, and dialogue between art and landscape.
As part of the Parks Among the Sculptures monthly programming series, both residents will offer AIR in Conversation presentations: a public talk and workshop experiences designed to give visitors insight into their creative processes. Constance Jaquays presentation will take place on July 25, from 2 pm to 3 pm, while Ed Woodhams presentation will take place on August 29, from 2 pm to 3 pm. Details and registration are available on the
Parks website.
The AIR program is a cornerstone of Cold Hollow Sculpture Parks mission to foster meaningful connections between artists, audiences, and the natural environment. Each residency provides artists the opportunity to live and work on-site, respond to the Parks unique setting, and engage directly with visitors through open dialogue and shared creative inquiry.
2026 Artists-in-Residence
Constance Jaquay is a Los Angelesbased experimental movement artist, filmmaker, and physical playwright whose interdisciplinary work positions the body as the primary text of performance. Through a practice that blends dance theatre, performance art, and visual installation, Jaquay explores themes of generational memory, mental health, and the lived experiences of Black womanhood. Her work draws from matrilineal lineage and investigates how histories are carried and transformed within the body, creating performances that center empathy, embodiment, and radical witnessing.
Ed Woodham is a New York Citybased conceptual social-absurdist artist, curator, and educator whose interdisciplinary practice spans performance, public art, installation, and social practice. With more than four decades of experience, Woodhams work engages audiences through humor, collaboration, and participatory frameworks that challenge traditional notions of public space. As the founder of the internationally recognized
Art in Odd Places (AiOP) initiative, his work encourages civic engagement and reimagines how communities interact with art in everyday environments.
AIR Presentations: Inviting the Public Into the Process
The AIR Presentations series offers a rare opportunity for visitors to engage directly with artists during the evolution of their work. These sessions are designed to be conversational, exploratory, and participatory, inviting audiences to witness ideas in progress, ask questions, and experience the intersection of artistic practice and place in real time.
Through these presentations, Cold Hollow Sculpture Park continues to expand its role as not only a site for experiencing finished works, but also as a living creative laboratory where art is actively made, shared, and discussed.
We are honored to support Constance and Ed through the AIR program and to welcome their practices into the life of the park, said Executive Director Robin Schatell. Both artists bring a depth of vision and inquiry that will resonate beautifully Among the Sculptures, activating the landscape and Davids work in unexpected ways. It is especially exciting, on a personal level, to see artists I admire so deeply engage with our park and share this experience with our visitors.
For more information, visit
www.coldhollowsculpturepark.com or follow @coldhollowsculpturepark on Instagram and Facebook.
The Artists-in-Residence Program
The Artists-in-Residence program at Cold Hollow Sculpture Park brings early and mid-career artists from across disciplines to engage with the Parks environment, community, and collection. Residencies emphasize experimentation, interdisciplinary practice, and public interaction, reinforcing the Parks commitment to accessibility and creative exploration. AIR Presentations are open to the public as part of the Parks Among the Sculptures programming series. Admission is by donation pay-what-you wish. Dates and details will be announced on the Parks website and social channels.
Cold Hollow Sculpture Park
Founded in 2014 by sculptor David Stromeyer and writer Sarah Stromeyer, Cold Hollow Sculpture Park in Enosburg, Vermont, is an immersive art experience in a beautiful northern Vermont setting. Visitors can take one of the most inspiring walks in Vermont among 70+ sculptures spanning five decades by artist David Stromeyer. The Park also offers programming that explores the intersection of intellectual and creative pursuits. The Park is open from mid-June through mid-October, Thursdays through Sundays, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. For more information, please visit
www.coldhollowsculpturepark.com.