Becoming a USA Fellow 

Selection Process
To become a USA Fellow, one must be nominated. Each year nominations are made by an anonymous group of arts leaders, critics, scholars, and artists chosen by USA. Nominators do not know one another; their identities remain confidential.

Nominators are asked to submit names of artists they believe show an extraordinary commitment to their craft. Artists at any stage of career development may be nominated. To be considered for fellowships, artists must be 21 years of age or older and U.S. citizens or legal residents in any U.S. state. A legal resident is any individual who has the status of having been lawfully accorded the privilege of residing permanently in the U.S. as an immigrant in accordance with the U.S. immigration laws. Artists must have the following:

  • Expert artistic skills
  • Artistic education or training (formal or informal)
  • A history of deriving income from those skills
  • A history of active engagement in creating artwork and presenting it to the public

Artist Applications
Nominated artists are notified of their nominations and encouraged to apply. Artists are required to fill out a simple online application and submit work samples.

Peer Panel Review 
Discipline-specific peer panels composed of leading artists and art experts meet to select the program finalists. The USA Board of Directors approves the final recommendations.

Announcement 
The USA Fellows and the peer panelists who selected them are announced annually at an awards celebration.

    

USA Fellow Story:Basil Twist

Talk to Basil Twist about puppets, and you will come away thinking about mortality, animism, and magic. “Puppetry goes beyond entertainment into issues of life, death, and the soul,” says the 39-year-old New York resident.


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Donor Profile:Eli and Edythe Broad

"We have learned a lot from listening and talking to artists. They see thngs differently. Their work is what's going on. They may not be able to predict the future, but they make statements that say where it's going, and it often does."

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