The Chicago-based nonprofit United States Artists has named the 50 artists who will receive its annual USA Fellowship and the recipient of its Berresford Prize, both of which come with an unrestricted grant of $50,000.
This year marks the 20th anniversary of United States Artists, which was founded in 2006 and is one of a handful of US-based organizations that provides direct support to artists.
“For two decades, United States Artists has advanced a simple yet powerful conviction—that artists are essential to the imagination and health of our society,” Judilee Reed, the nonprofit’s president and CEO, said in a statement. “Our commitment to unrestricted support, with programs such as the USA Fellowship, has enabled artists across every discipline and place to sustain their livelihoods, take creative risks, and define their own paths forward.”
The USA Fellowship is awarded in nine disciplines: architecture and design, craft, dance, media, music, theater and performance, traditional arts, visual art, and writing. The 2026 cohort includes several acclaimed artists, including Mendi + Keith Obadike and Nancy Baker Cahill, who won in media; visual arts fellows include Edra Soto, Eric-Paul Riege, Macon Reed, and Maia Chao, who will feature in this year’s Whitney Biennial; and in writing, Johanna Hedva, who is known for her essay collection How to Tell When We Will Die: On Pain, Disability, and Doom.
“As a non-commercial artist, maintaining financial stability is an ongoing challenge,” Soto told ARTnews in an email. “Grants and commissions are my primary sources of income, which can pose challenges when I undertake creative risks. Grants are not only central to my livelihood but also vital to my mental and emotional well-being. My grant awards are directly connected to my art creation and the investments I make to produce my work.”
Soto, who will later this month open an exhibition at the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art in Kansas City, Missouri, said she plans to use the grant money toward the realization of future projects, which as her career has progressed have become more ambitious and more costly financially. Those costs include “research and materials, studio rent, studio assistance, art storage rent, travel expenses, taking chances, living, and doing my best to support others, especially artists like me who serve as society’s collective consciousness, in the best way we can, during this tragically disgraceful moment in American history.”
In an email to ARTnews, the Obadikes said, “We are truly honored by the acknowledgment of our work and deeply grateful for this support. What is needed now is a broad effort to nurture culture and the imagination in America, and supporting artists is a vital part of that effort. We extend our heartfelt thanks to our nominator and United States Artists for its continued commitment to that endeavor.”
The winner of the 2026 Berresford Prize, which goes to a “cultural practitioner for their significant contributions to the advancement of artists in society,” per a release, is Lori Lea Pourier (Oglala Lakota), who has been an advocate for Native artists and artist communities for nearly three decades. Her career includes roles at the First Nations Development Institute and the International Indigenous Women’s Network, as well as the founding of the First Peoples Fund.
The Berresford Prize is named for Susan Berresford, a past president of the Ford Foundation. Early in her career, Pourier met Berresford when she was at Ford, she said in a statement. “As a young Native woman entering the Foundation’s offices for the first time, I could not have imagined the path that lay ahead.” Pourier added that past recipients of grants from First Peoples Fund have received support from United States Artists, “an enduring reflection of the vision and investment that began in those early years.”
The full list of 2026 USA Fellows follows below.
| Architecture & Design Curry J. Hackett (he/him) Multimedia Artist and Educator Brooklyn, NY Mararet Roach Wheeler (she/her) Rosten Woo (he/him) |
| Craft Anina Major (she/her) Artist Los Angleles, CA Anthony Sonnenberg (he/him) Corey Pemberton (he/him/they/them) Norwood Viviano (he/him) Robell Awake (he/him) Xenobia Bailey (she/her) |
| Dance Jason Samuels Smith (he/him) Tap Dancer Jersey City, NJ Mame Diarra Speis-Biaye (she/her) Parul Shah (she/her) Shamel Pitts (he/him) Thaddeus Davis (he/him) & Tanya Wideman-Davis (she/her) (Wideman Davis Dance) |
| Film Fawzia Mirza (she/her/they/them) Filmmaker Los Angeles, CA Jules Rosskam (he/him) Monica Sorelle (she/her) Raven Jackson (she/her) Set Hernandez (they/them/she/her/he/him) |
| Media Anjali Kamat (she/her) Creative Nonfiction and Multimedia Artist New York, NY Chenjerai Kumanyika (he/him) Mendi Obadike (she/her) & Keith Obadike (he/him) Nancy Baker Cahill (she/her) Nat Decker (they/them) Nathan Young (he/him) |
| Music Ben LaMar Gay (he/him) Multi-Freshness Artist, Improviser, and Composer Chicago, IL Sharon Udoh (she/her) inti figgis-vizueta (she/her) Layale Chaker (she/her) Terri Lyne Carrington (she/her) |
| Theater & Performance Jeanette Oi-Suk Yew (she/her) Theater Designer and Artist New York, NY Mei Ann Teo Mina Morita (she/her) Tanya Orellana (she/her) Ty Defoe (he/him/we/our) |
| Traditional Arts Aristotle Jones (he/him) Singer, Songwriter, and Storyteller Osage, WV Lily Hope (she/her) Sheila Kay Adams (she/her) Willi Carlisle (he/him) |
| Visual Art Edra Soto (she/her) Interdisciplinary Artist Chicago, IL Eric-Paul Riege (he/him) Macon Reed (they/them) Maia Chao (she/her) Mercedes Dorame (she/her) Raheleh Filsoofi (she/her) |
| Writing Johanna Hedva (they/them) Writer, Artist, and Musician Tongva, Tataviam, Serrano, Kizh, and Chumash Territories aka Los Angeles, CA LaTasha N. Nevada Diggs (she/her) Lauren Rebecca Weinstein Mayukh Sen (he/him) Sarah Aziza (she/her/هي) |
