courtesy United States Artists

The following is a press release from the Chicago-based organization United States Artists announcing the 2023 recipients of its fellowship. This year's Fellows include four who are focused on architecture and design: Alexis Hope, Bryan C. Lee Jr., Krystal C. Mack, and Deanna Van Buren.

United States Artists (USA) is proud to announce its 2023 USA Fellows. This year, forty-five Fellows across ten creative disciplines will receive unrestricted $50,000 cash awards. The award honors their creative accomplishments and supports their ongoing artistic and professional development. USA Fellowships are awarded to artists at all stages of their careers and from all areas of the country through a rigorous nomination and panel selection process. Fellowships are awarded in the following disciplines: Architecture & Design, Craft, Dance, Film, Media, Music, Theater & Performance, Traditional Arts, Visual Art, and Writing.

Representing nineteen states, Puerto Rico and Guam, the 2023 USA Fellows offer their work as a balm for the past and present, inspiring us to create a world in which everyone’s stories are reflected and respected. Socially engaged practices, community-based work, and healing are particularly important to this year’s group, appearing across every discipline in varying forms. Multidisciplinarity is also a core value for the newest class of USA Fellows, manifesting in the mediums they employ and how their processes, performances, and pedagogy have evolved and responded to both historical currents and contemporary concerns.

The makeup of this year’s class represents a continued commitment to elevating artists at every stage of their career. This year’s class of Fellows range in age from their 20s to 90s, and all present new visions of artistic innovation and excellence across their disciplines. They also demonstrate USA’s focus on elevating regional diversity in arts funding. This year’s class includes the first USA Fellow from Guam, Roquin-Jon Quichocho Siongco, as well as the first Fellows from Arizona in over five years: Barbara Teller Ornelas, an accomplished fifth-generation Navajo weaver, and Ofelia Zepeda, a Tohono O’odham poet, linguist, and Director of the American Indian Language Development Institute.

“We are thrilled to celebrate this remarkable class of artists who reach across disciplines to imagine new forms of artmaking reflecting commitments to care and kinship,” noted Judilee Reed, President and CEO of United States Artists. “As we enter this new chapter of United States Artists, we will continue to expand upon our historic commitment to elevating artists and their essential work, modeling new paradigms of support that can allow artists to truly thrive.”

“This year, we are proud to award forty-five fellowships to this incredible group of artists and cultural practitioners whose interdisciplinary, community-centered work demonstrates the power of our country’s art ecosystems to advance equity and offer new paths forward,” commented Ed Henry, United States Artists Board Chair. “United States Artists’ commitment to unrestricted, artist-centered funding continues to reinforce the greater necessity of such philanthropic support within the field at large.”

Past awardees include musician and composer Laura Ortman (2022), creative composer and trumpeter Wadada Leo Smith (2021), painter and visual artist Howardena Pindell (2020), dancer and choreographer Alice Sheppard (2019), poet Claudia Rankine (2016), potter Roberto Lugo (2016), writer Teju Cole (2015), filmmaker Barry Jenkins (2012), documentary filmmaker Laura Poitras (2010), fashion designers Kate and Laura Mulleavy of Rodarte (2009), multidisciplinary artist Martha Rosler (2008), and multimedia artist Paul Chan (2007).

Karen Ann Hoffman, 2022 Traditional Arts Fellow, said, "While creating my art (Haudenosaunee Raised Beadwork), I am exquisitely connected to my heritage; I hear the whispers of a thousand generations of our artists. This Fellowship from United States Artists provided a portal allowing me to introduce that ancestral culture to a broad, engaged audience. USA's financial support, augmented by opportunities for professional growth and business development, created a secure sounding board for the messages of my cultural past to resonateinto our shared future. I am grateful."

The USA Fellowship is the organization’s flagship program and is central to its mission of believing in artists and their essential role in our society. Since 2006, the USA Fellowship has provided direct support to artists across the country. With this unrestricted award, Fellows decide for themselves how to best use the money—whether it is creating new work, paying rent, reducing debt, getting healthcare, or supporting their families. The organization has awarded nearly 800 artists and cultural practitioners with over $38 million of direct support through the USA Fellowship.

Each year since 2019, United States Artists has also presented the Berresford Prize – an unrestricted $50,000 award given to a cultural practitioner who has contributed significantly to the advancement, well-being, and care of artists in society. In addition to directly providing resources to artists and cultural practitioners, United States Artists advises foundations, philanthropists, and other field partners to create or expand programs, administer funds, and conduct research in support of artists. Partners have included Mellon Foundation, Ford Foundation, John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, Kenneth Rainin Foundation, and Maxwell | Hanrahan Foundation, among others. In 2020, USA was one of the core organizers of Artist Relief, an emergency, coalition-led initiative that supported artists facing dire financial circumstances due to COVID-19, and distributed more than $23.4 million in emergency grants to 4,682 artists over 15 months.

To make its work possible, United States Artists actively fundraises each year and is supported by a broad range of philanthropic foundations, companies, and individuals committed to cultivating contemporary culture across the country.

The 2023 USA Fellowships were generously made possible by: Sarah Arison, BarrFoundation, Bloomberg Philanthropies, Builders Initiative, Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, Eames Institute of Infinite Curiosity, Ford Foundation, The Ford Family Foundation, David Horvitz and Francie Bishop Good, Thomas S. Kenan Institute for the Arts, John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, Mellon Foundation, Miranda Family Fund, Pritzker Pucker Family Foundation, Rasmuson Foundation, The Rockefeller Foundation, The Fred and Eve SimonCharitable Foundation, The Todd and Betiana Simon Foundation, Paul and Annette Smith, Walder Foundation, Katie Weitz PhD, Windgate Foundation, USA Ambassadors, and USA
Board of Trustees.

The 2023 USA Fellows are:

Architecture & Design

Alexis Hope (she/her)Designer and Musician
Seattle, WA and Cambridge, MA

Bryan C. Lee Jr (he/him)Design Justice Architect
New Orleans, LA

Krystal C. Mack (she/her)Food Designer and Social Practice Artist
Baltimore, MD

Deanna Van Buren (she/her)Architect and Analogue Immersive Installation Artist
Oakland, CA

Craft

Ashwini Bhat (she/her)Transdisciplinary Artist
Penngrove, CA

Syd Carpenter (she/her)Sculptor and Ceramicist
Philadelphia, PA

Hong Hong (she/her)Painter and Papermaker
Beverly, MA

Bukola Koiki (she/her)Conceptual Fiber Artist
Portland, ME

Winnie Owens-Hart (she/her)Ceramic Artist
Falls Church, VA

Luis Alvaro Sahagun Nuño (he/him)Interdisciplinary Artist and Ritualist
Chicago, IL

Dance

Ayodele Casel (she/her)Choreographer and Tap Dancer
New York, NY

devynn emory (he/they)Choreographer, Dancer, and Multidisciplinary Artist
Brooklyn, NY (Lenapehoking)

Antoine Hunter, Purple Fire Crow (Purple Fire Crow)Producer, Choreographer, Director, and Deaf Advocate
Oakland, CA

Ayako Kato (she/her)Experimental Dancer, Choreographer, and Improviser
Chicago, IL

Noemí Segarra Ramírez (she/her)Movement Artist
San Juan, Puerto Rico

Film

M.G. Evangelista (they/them) Writer and Director Los Angeles, CA

Jason Fitzroy Jeffers (he/him)Filmmaker and Civic Media Worker
Miami, FL

Grace Lee (she/her)Filmmaker
Los Angeles, CA

Loira Limbal (she/her)Filmmaker
Carolina, Puerto Rico

Angelo Madsen Minax (he/him)Interdisciplinary Filmmaker
Burlington, VT and New York, NY

Media

Kite (she/her)Artist, Composer, and Academic
Tulsa, OK

Rasheedah Phillips (she/they)Interdisciplinary Artist and Experimental Writer
Philadelphia, PA

Angela Washko (she/her)Media Artist
Pittsburgh, PA

Music

Arooj Aftab (she/her)Musician
New York, NY

Eduardo Alegría (he/him)Queer Storyteller
San Juan, Puerto Rico

Abdu Ali (he/they)Musician, Multidisciplinary Artist, and Writer
Baltimore, MD

Jlin (she/her)Electronic Composer
Gary, IN

Theater & Performance

Sharon Bridgforth (she/her)Writer and Performing Artist
Inglewood, CA

Eisa Davis (she/her)Writer, Composer, and Performer
Brooklyn, NY

Leslie Ishii (she/her)Theatre-Maker and Social Justice Activist
Juneau, AK

Kattorris Bang! (Nathalie Nia Faulk [they/them] and indee mitchell [they/he])Cultural Organizers and Performers
New Orleans, LA

Cristal Chanelle Truscott (she/her)Ensemble Theatre Artist and Culture Worker
Chicago, IL

Traditional Arts

Brenton Jordan (he/him)Storyteller, Stickman, and Ring Shouter
Eulonia, GA

Marques Hanalei Marzan (he/him)Fiber Arts Knowledge Bearer
Honolulu, HI

Barbara Teller Ornelas (she/her)Navajo Tapestry Weaver
Tucson, AZ

Roquin-Jon Quichocho Siongco (they/them)Weaver and Fashion Designer
Yigu, Guåhan

Visual Art

Natalie Ball (she/her)Visual Artist
Chiloquin, RA (OR)

Carolina Caycedo (she/ella)Artist
Los Angeles, CA

Christine Sun Kim (she/her)Artist
US and Germany

Guadalupe Maravilla (he/him)Transdisciplinary Visual Artist, Choreographer, and Healer
Brooklyn, NY

Thaddeus Mosley (he/him)Sculptor
Pittsburgh, PA

Writing

Ernestine Shaankaláxt’ Hayes (she/they)
Writer
Juneau, AK

Ilya Kaminsky (he/him)Poet
Atlanta, GA

Alex Marzano-Lesnevich (they/them)Writer
Portland, ME

Ofelia Zepeda (she/her)Poet
Tucson, AZ