Submit Writing
For those who think with their hands, write from the chest, or have something to say that doesn’t fit anywhere else.
We’re looking for thoughtful, kaupapa-aligned writing to feature on the Provocation Station blog. This isn’t a literary journal, an academic outlet, or a content farm. It’s a space for slow, reflective, sometimes raw pieces that come from lived experience, creative practice, or deep thinking across tangled worlds.
We welcome contributions from Indigenous, queer, decolonial, and cross-cultural perspectives — and from anyone whose voice carries both clarity and care. You don’t need to be a “writer.” Just someone with something real to say.
What We’re Looking For:
Short essays or reflections (500–1500 words)
Longer-form writing (up to 4000 words)
Interviews or conversational pieces
Visual-text hybrids (images with narrative, reflection, or conceptual framing)
Letters, fragments, or diaristic provocations
Process-based writing from artists and thinkers
First-person pieces grounded in place, whakapapa, resistance, or refusal
You don’t need footnotes. You don’t need to tidy yourself up. But your voice should come through clearly — present, grounded, and unapologetically yours.
Possible Topics
We’re open to a wide range of writing — but here are some themes and threads we’re especially interested in right now:
Identity, whakapapa, and belonging across place or time
Creative process as survival, resistance, or ritual
Decolonial thinking, Indigenous knowledge, and refusal
The politics of softness, rage, memory, and joy
Critique that isn’t extractive
What doesn’t get said in art school, grant applications, or gallery texts
Being an artist outside the centre (geographically, culturally, economically)
Making do, making differently, making anyway
Art as lived life, not lifestyle
This isn’t an exhaustive list — just a flavour. If your piece doesn’t fit neatly anywhere else but still feels honest and necessary, send it anyway.
How to Submit
You can either pitch an idea or submit a finished piece. We accept both — just follow the relevant instructions below.
Pitching an Idea
If you’re not quite ready to submit a full piece, you’re welcome to send a short pitch instead.
Write 1–2 paragraphs outlining what you’d like to write about
Tell us why it’s relevant to Provocation Station — what themes or ideas you’re exploring
Include a sentence about who you are and where you’re writing from
Email your pitch to: submit@provocationstation.com
We'll let you know if it’s a fit and whether we’d like to see a full draft.
Submitting a Finished Piece
If you’re ready to submit a full piece, here’s what to include:
Cover Page
Please include a simple cover page at the start of your document with:
Title of your piece
Your full name
Pronouns (optional)
Location
Email or contact info
Contributor bio (50–75 words) — to run alongside your piece if published
List of images (if included), with:
Image number (e.g. Image 1, Image 2…)
Caption
Credit/attribution
Alt text (1–2 sentences for accessibility)
Written Piece
Save your piece as a .doc/.docx or a Google Doc with “anyone with the link” access enabled
Insert image placeholders like this in the text:
<<Image 1>>
,<<Image 2>>
, etc.
Image Files
Attach 1–5 JPG images, named like this:
Lastname_Image1.jpg
,Lastname_Image2.jpg
Make sure image numbers match the placeholders and the list in your cover page
Formatting Guidelines
We’re not fussy — but here are a few things that help:
Use 12pt body text in a standard font (e.g. Arial, Calibri, Times)
Avoid complex layouts — no columns, tables, or text boxes
Use bold or italics for emphasis (not underlining or ALL CAPS)
Clearly mark headings and use image placeholders
A short references or acknowledgements section is welcome but optional
We’ll handle layout and final editing with care. You don’t need to be polished — but you do need to be clear.
Referencing & Acknowledgement
We don’t require formal footnotes — but we do believe in naming where ideas come from.
Please acknowledge thinkers, kōrero, artists, or influences that shape your writing. You’re welcome to include a short bibliography or reference list at the end if it fits your piece. Inline links or narrative acknowledgements are just as valid.
If your writing draws on mātauranga Māori or wānanga, feel free to acknowledge in ways that align with your own tikanga.
We want to honour intellectual and creative whakapapa — not flatten your voice into someone else’s style guide.
What We’re Not Taking Right Now:
PDFs (they mess with formatting — sorry!)
Exhibition listings, CVs, or bios without a written component
Promotional content or product reviews
AI-generated work
Reviews of exhibitions or events — we want to make sure that, if we do this, permissions are properly sought and contributors are fairly supported. Our hope is to build a small paid network of reviewers in different cities.
Work submitted without care
What Happens Next:
You can submit any time — we read quarterly and respond in March, June, September, and December.
If your piece is accepted, we’ll offer light edits if needed and confirm a publication timeline with you. You’ll retain full copyright and always have final say before anything goes live.
We’re happy to support contributors during the editing process — especially if you're still finding your written voice. We can help shape, tighten, or clarify your piece while keeping your tone and intent intact.
You don’t need to be polished to be published — but you do need to be clear. We’re here to help with that, if you’re open to it.
Interested in Writing Reviews?
We’re not currently accepting unsolicited reviews of exhibitions or events — but we’re working on it.
Our hope is to build a small, paid network of contributors based in different cities across Aotearoa — people who can respond to shows with care, context, and consent.
If you’re interested in being considered, email reviews@provocationstation.com with a short note about who you are, where you're based, and what kind of art or writing excites you.
This might start small — but we want to do it right.