List of United States Artists (USA) Fellowship recipients

This is a list of recipients of United States Artists (USA) Fellowship grants. The grant is issued annually by United States Artists (USA) a non-government philanthropic organization that supports living American artists.[1]

USA Fellows

2020

2019

2018

2017

  • Architecture and Design: Norman Kelley, Amanda Williams
  • Media: Starlee Kine, Terence Nance, Elaine McMillion Sheldon, TNEG

2016

  • Architecture and Design: Janet Echelman, Sharon Johnston & Mark Lee (Johnston Marklee)
  • Crafts: Vivian Beer, Lauren Fensterstock, Anna Hepler, Roberto Lugo, Annabeth Rosen, Piper Shepard, April Surgent
  • Dance: Michelle Dorrance, Faye Driscoll, Donna Uchizono, Rosie Herrera, Steve Paxton, Yvonne Rainer, Raphael Xavier
  • Media: Steven Paul Judd, Lynn Hershman Leeson, Quique Rivera Rivera
  • Theater and Performance: Daniel Alexander Jones, Miranda July, Hirokazu Kosaka, Young Jean Lee, Jefferson Pinder, Peggy Shaw
  • Traditional Arts: Teri Greeves, Cherice Harrison-Nelson, Ernie Marsh, Vicky Holt Takamine

2015

  • Architecture and Design: Jonathan Muecke and Chat Travieso
  • Dance: Jonah Bokaer, Camille A. Brown, Toni Pierce-Sands and Uri Sands
  • Media: Peter Nicks, Deborah Stratman
  • Music: Maya Beiser, David Lang, Rudresh Mahanthappa, Joe Louis Walker, Invincible ill Weaver, Shara Worden, Jasiri X

2014

  • Crafts & Traditional Arts: Marcus Amerman, brothers Einar de la Torre & Jamex de la Torre, Darryl Montana, Tip Toland
  • Dance: Alejandro Cerrudo, d. Sabela Grimes, RoseAnne Spradlin

2013

No awards were made in 2013.[8]

2012

Actor Tim Robbins presented the 2012 awards a celebration held at the Los Angeles Getty Center.[9] Winners included:

  • Architecture and Design: Architects and educators Marcelo Spina and Georgina Huljich, architecture educator Stephen Luoni, landscape architect and educator Kate Orff, and architects Jesse Reiser and Nanako Umemoto.
  • Crafts and Traditional Arts: Alaska artist Nicholas Galanin, educator and jeweler Myra Mimlitsch-Gray, Arkansas basketmaker Leon Niehues, glass artist Sibylle Peretti, educator and textile artist Rowland Ricketts, and educator and ceramics artist Kurt Weiser.
  • Music: Drummer, pianist and composer Jack DeJohnette, violinist and composer Colin Jacobsen and cellist and conductor Eric Jacobsen, bluegrass singer and songwriter Claire Lynch, educator and flute and whistle player Joanie Madden, musician and educator Eugene Rodriguez (musician), banjo player Tony Trishcka, and composer Edward White.

2011

  • Architecture and Design: Architect, engineer, fashion designer, and educator Elena Manferdini, conceptual artist J. Morgan Puett, architectural designer, artist, and educator Jenny E. Sabin, architects and educators Ada Tolla and Giuseppe Lignano, and architect, scholar, and educator Mabel O. Wilson.
  • Crafts and Traditional Arts: Multimedia artist and educator Sonya Clark, artist, designer and blacksmith Tom Joyce, glass artist Beth Lipman, textile artist Jon Eric Riis, ceramist and educator Akio Takamori, and basketmaker Aaron Yakim.
  • Media: Screenwriter and director Tze Chun, producer and director Steve James, interdisciplinary artist John Jota Leanos, documentary filmmaker James Longley, radio documentary producers Kara Oehler and Ann Heppermann, filmmaker Dee Rees, screenwriter and director Kelly Reichardt.
  • Theater Arts: Theater director, filmmaker, writer, and educator Lee Breuer, director John Collins, theater artist Teresa Hernandez, director, playwright, choreographer, designer, and visual artist Nancy Keystone, playwright, artistic director, and educator Kirk Lynn, and playwright and director Octavio Solis.

2010

  • Architecture and Design: Architect Teddy Cruz, architect Greg Lynn, and graphic designer David Reinfurt.
  • Crafts and Traditional Arts: Passamaquoddy basketmaker Jeremy Frey, furniture designer Matthias Pliessnig, weaver, writer, and performance artist Joyce Scott, ceramic artist Michael Sherrill, ceramist W. A. Ehren Tool, and basketmaker Jennifer Heller Zurick.
  • Dance: Choreographer and dancer Miguel Gutierrez, choreographer, musician, and dance filmmaker Dayna Harrison, choreographer Deborah Hay, choreographer Trey McIntyre, dancer and choreographer Bebe Miller, and teacher, dancer and choreographer Awilda Sterling-Duprey.
  • Media: Documentary filmmaker Natalia Almada, director and screenwriter Ramin Bahrani, documentary filmmaker Anne Lewis, documentary filmmaker Almudena Carracedo, director, producer, and screenwriter Cherian Dabis, audio producer Barrett Golding, and film director and screenwriter Tina Mabry.
  • Theater Arts: Theatrical designer Julie Archer, artistic directors of Pig Iron Theatre Company Gabriel Quinn Bauriedel, Dan Rothenberg, and Dito van Reigersberg, playwright, actor, and artistic director of Carlyle Brown & Company Carlyle Brown, playwright, director, and performer Danny Hoch, writer of screenplays, musicals, and plays Quiara Alegria Hudes, playwright Rajiv Joseph, and ensemble director Gerard Stropnicky.

2009

  • Architecture and Design: Architect and professor Neil Denari, architect, designer, and educator Laura Kurgan, architect, urban designer, developer, and activist Rick Lowe, and fashion designers Kate and Laura Mulleavy.
  • Crafts and Traditional Arts: Alaskan Alutiiq mask carver Perry Eaton, potters Delores Lewis Garcia/Emma Lewis Mitchell, educator and artist Beth Lo, birch bark basket maker Dona Look, glass artist Mary Shaffer, and ceramic artist Kukuli Velarde.
  • Dance: Choreographer, dancer, vocalist, and educator Sophiline Cheam Shapiro, performance artists and educators Lin Hixson and Matthew Goulish, hula master and educator Hokulani Holt-Padilla, choreographer and educator Tere O'Connor, and choreographer Reggie Wilson.
  • Media: Screenwriter and director Cruz Angeles, film director Charles Burnett, radio producer Scott Carrier, documentary filmmaker Heather Courtney, radio artists and producers Elizabeth Meister and Dan Collison, and film director and producer Renee Tajima-Peña.
  • Visual Arts: Sculptor Diana al-Hadid, Terry Allen, painter, graphic artist, and printmaker Vija Celmins, Anthony Hernandez, sculptor, video, and performance artist Joan Jonas, performance artist Kim Jones, publishers, master printers, and collagists Martin Mazorra and Michael Houston, and printmaker Dave McKenzie.

2008

  • Architecture and Design: Julie Bargman, Stephen Burks, Douglas Garafolo, J. Meejin Yoon, and Andrew Zago.
  • Media: Realist filmmaker Cary Joji Fukunaga, documentary filmmaker William Greaves, filmmaker Andrew Okpeaha MacLean, screenwriter, video artist, and filmmaker Lourdes Portillo, experimental documentary filmmaker Jay Rosenblatt, and video artist, filmmaker, and theater director Ela Troyano.
  • Theater Arts: Actor Karen Kandel, writer, director, and performer Will Power, director and artistic director Bill Rauch, actor, director, writer, and dramaturge Rosalba Rolon, and conceptual artist lighting designer Jennifer Tipton.

2007

  • Crafts and Traditional Arts: Alaskan Tlingit totem carver Tommy Joseph, textile artist Gwendolyn Magee, electronic textile artist Maggie Orth, ceramic artist Virgil Ortiz, and carver and sculptor Susie Silook.

2006

  • Architecture and Design: Sigi Moeslinger and Masamichi Udagawa.

References

  1. "Art for our sake". Boston.com. Retrieved January 26, 2018.
  2. "United States Artists:Cauleen Smith". www.unitedstatesartists.org. United States Artists (USA). Retrieved January 26, 2018.
  3. "United States Artists:Awards". www.unitedstatesartists.org. United States Artists (USA). Retrieved January 26, 2018.
  4. "Awards". United States Artists. Retrieved September 4, 2017.
  5. "Awards". United States Artists. Retrieved September 4, 2017.
  6. "United States Artists Fellowship Grantees Announced". October 13, 2014. Retrieved 1 October 2017.
  7. "Say hello to the 2014 USA Fellows". United States Artists. Retrieved October 1, 2017.
  8. Isaacs, Deanna (March 31, 2015). "With the arrival of US Artists, Chicago becomes home to still more 'genius' grants". Chicago Reader. Retrieved October 1, 2017.
  9. "Tim Robbins Presents $50,000 Artist Grants to Annie Proulx, David Henry Hwang and 48 More". The Hollywood Reporter. December 3, 2012. Retrieved October 1, 2017.
  10. "United States Artists". www.unitedstatesartists.org. Retrieved January 19, 2018.
  11. Rennie Harris Puremovement
  12. "2006 Cultural Capital Fellows", First Peoples Fund.
  13. Featured Artist, "Craft in America: A Journey to the Artists, Origins, and Techniques of American Craft", May 2007. Public Broadcasting Service
  14. Asian American Journalists Association, "Dmae Roberts Receives Fellowship from United States Artists", December 8, 2006.
  15. Carol Vogel, "Hot Artists in Alaska", The New York Times, July 27, 2007.
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