Whiskey Brand-Supported Artist Residencies

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Glenfiddich Chooses Jenine Marsh for Its Residence

Glenfiddich — a brand recognized as Canada’s favourite single malt Scotch whisky — has announced that Calgary-born, Toronto-based artist Jenine Marsh will be the 2026 Canadian recipient of its Artists in Residence Program. This opportunity is a three-month, all-expenses-paid residency valued at over $28,000. It takes place at the historic Glenfiddich Distillery in Dufftown, Scotland. 

Jenine Marsh was elected from more than 200 national applicants. She plans to conduct site-specific research at the Robbie Dhu spring, the distillery’s water source since 1887 and explore the ritual of coin-wishing and its roots in Celtic water worship. Her project will examine themes of value, agency, and hope within capitalism and will culminate in a permanent public sculptural artwork installed near the spring. 

 This residency marks the 20th consecutive year that Glenfiddich has supported a Canadian artist, and 2026 also represents the program’s 25th anniversary globally.
Trend Themes
1. Brand-sponsored Arts Residency - Corporate-funded residencies are evolving into long-term cultural platforms that conflate brand identity with artistic legitimacy, creating new models for sponsored creativity and audience engagement.
2. Heritage-driven Experiential Marketing - Marketing strategies that foreground historic sites and origin stories are transforming product narratives into immersive experiences that deepen consumer loyalty through authenticity and place-based rituals.
3. Artist-led Place-based Storytelling - Artists embedding research and permanent installations in operational sites are reframing how cultural meaning and public space intersect, enabling novel forms of community-facing interpretation and value creation.
Industry Implications
1. Luxury Spirits - Premium alcohol brands are leveraging cultural patronage and site-specific storytelling to differentiate offerings in crowded markets and extend brand equity into cultural capital.
2. Cultural Tourism - Destination experiences that integrate contemporary art, local rituals, and industrial heritage are redefining visitor expectations and enabling new revenue streams tied to curated authenticity.
3. Public Art and Urban Development - Municipal and private development projects incorporating commissioned permanent artworks are shifting notions of placemaking and unlocking alternative funding and partnership models for civic spaces.

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