MONTGOMERY, Ala., (June 16, 2026) – Supporting
individual artists is key to Alabama’s creative growth. That’s why the Alabama
State Council on the Arts is awarding $172,500 in funding to 23
Alabama-based artists and arts educators.
The Council on the Arts’ competitive Fellowship grant
program empowers emerging and established artists and arts educators to hone
their skills and pursue innovative projects. These investments not only bolster
confidence and professional growth but also enrich communities and inspire
future generations. For fiscal year 2027 Fellowships, the award amount was
increased from $5,000 to $7,500 in an effort to better support Alabama’s
creative community.
“Alabama’s artists and arts educators help strengthen the
cultural, educational, and economic vitality of our state. Their creativity
connects communities, empowers young people, and preserves the traditions that
make Alabama unique. The Council on the Arts is proud to invest in these
individuals so they can deepen their craft, pursue new opportunities, and
continue contributing to the well-being of the places they call home.
Supporting artists is one of the most meaningful ways we can ensure Alabama’s communities
remain vibrant, connected, and full of possibility,” said Elliot Knight,
executive director of the Council on the Arts.
The following Fellowship grant recipients represent some of
our state’s most talented individuals working in arts education, craft, dance,
design, music, photography, poetry, prose, theatre, and visual arts. Notably, five
of these individuals are previous Fellowship recipients. James Braziel, Tina
Mozelle Braziel, Scott Fisk, Kwoya Fagin Maples, and Jessica Smith join 81
other Alabama artists who have received the lifetime maximum of two awards
since the introduction of the Fellowship program in 1981.
Introducing the 2027 Fellowship Cohort
Vikash Achutaramaiah of Montgomery was awarded a
Music Fellowship. He is among the few artists worldwide currently performing
one of India’s most ancient musical traditions, the JalTarang. It consists of
water-tuned ceramic bowls struck with wooden sticks to produce precise melodic
pitches. Achutaramaiah previously received a 2026 Folk Arts Apprenticeship
grant from the Council on the Arts.
Garrett Ashley of Opelika was awarded a Prose
Fellowship. He is a multi-genre writer and the author of several books,
including the fiction collection Periphylla, and Other Deep Ocean
Attractions (Press 53) and the poetry collection Habitats (Loblolly
Press). Ashley holds a doctorate from the University of Southern Mississippi’s
Center for Writers and teaches creative writing at Tuskegee
University.
Taylor Barlow of Huntsville was awarded a Music
Fellowship. A bass clarinet specialist, she is committed to expanding the
instrument’s repertoire, having commissioned and premiered several new works.
Barlow is the Principal Clarinet of the Huntsville Ballet Orchestra, serves as
Alabama state chair for the International Clarinet Association, and is
executive director of the Huntsville Youth Orchestra.
James Braziel of Remlap was awarded a Prose
Fellowship. He is the author of multiple books, including the award-winning
story collection This Ditch-Walking Love (Livingston Press) and novels Birmingham,
35 Miles (Bantam) and Snakeskin Road (Bantam). He teaches creative
writing at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.
Tina Mozelle Braziel of Remlap was awarded a Poetry
Fellowship. She is the author of multiple poetry collections, including Known
by Salt (Anhinga Press) and Glass Cabin (Pulley Press), which she
co-wrote with her husband, James Braziel. Braziel is a practitioner and
advocate of eco-poetry and has worked with the Cahaba River Society and Alabama
Rivers Alliance.
Jillian Marie Browning of Birmingham was awarded the
Gay Burke Photography Fellowship. Their practice engages feminism, identity,
and the contemporary Black experience through photography, printmaking, and
alternative photographic processes. Browning’s work is in the permanent
collections of the Center for Photography at Woodstock and the Southeast Museum
of Photography, among others. They serve as the assistant professor of
photography at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.
Stacey Edwards of Greenville was awarded a Visual
Arts Fellowship. A former high school art teacher, she now shares her knowledge
and talent outside the traditional arts education classroom. As an artist,
Edwards focuses on capturing the experiences and people of her small town, as
reflected in her “Alabama Saints” series.
Amy Feger of Montevallo was awarded a Visual Arts
Fellowship. Inspired by her observations and influenced by current events,
representations of the land, historical paintings, and maps, she creates
drawings, digital images, plein air paintings, videos, and photographs that
inform her large-format metaphorical landscape oil paintings. Feger holds an
MFA in painting from the University of Alabama.
Scott Fisk of Homewood was awarded a Design
Fellowship. He is a designer, artist, and professor, and serves as chair of
Samford University’s Department of Art and Design. Fisk is an expert in
letterpress printing, and his creative work has appeared in more than 100 peer-reviewed
exhibitions worldwide and has earned recognition for both craft and conceptual
depth.
Susie Garrett of Huntsville was awarded a Craft
Fellowship. For over 40 years, she has worked as a graphic designer,
illustrator, sculptor, and arts educator. Garrett creates mixed-media work
combining colored pencil drawing with metal objects, and her practice centers
on transforming discarded and overlooked materials into clever, whimsical
art.
Maria Kuznetsova of Auburn was awarded a Prose
Fellowship. Born in Kyiv, Ukraine, she is the author of the nationally
acclaimed novels Oksana, Behave! (Spiegel & Grau/Random House) and Something
Unbelievable (Random House). Kuznetsova is the fiction editor of the
Southern Humanities Review and is an associate professor of creative writing at
Auburn University.
Kwoya Fagin Maples of Vestavia Hills was awarded a
Poetry Fellowship. A poet, bookshelf artist, and teacher of creative writing,
her creative practice spans both literary and visual arts. Maples is the author
of Long Eye (Hub City Press) and Mend (University Press of
Kentucky), which received a 2019 Hurston/Wright Legacy Finalist Award for
poetry.
Bobby Matthews of Hoover was awarded a Prose
Fellowship. His writing explores the dark and bloody heart of the modern South
and strives to show all the moving parts of a changing region. Matthews has
written three novels and a short story collection, and he received the 2023
Derringer Award for Best Long Story.
Millian Pham of Opelika was awarded a Visual Arts
Fellowship. She uses her art practice to dismantle social and cultural
expectations through the mediums of painting, printmaking, sculpture,
performance, and installation. Her visual research has been exhibited in Canada,
Pakistan, Korea, and across the U.S. Pham is an assistant professor of art at
Auburn University.
Chiharu Takahashi Roach of Birmingham was awarded a
Visual Arts Fellowship. Born in Nagoya, Japan, she is known for her
installations/paintings that explore human fragility, mortality, and hope.
Roach’s work utilizes multiple processes and features a complicated web of
cultural symbols that draws from her early life in Japan and her 25 years in
Alabama.
Jessica Smith of Tuscaloosa was awarded a Craft
Fellowship. She is a ceramic artist whose work has been exhibited locally,
regionally, and internationally. Smith holds an MFA from Tulane University and
a BFA from the New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University. She is
a professor of art at the University of West Alabama.
Wanda Sullivan of Mobile was awarded a Visual Arts
Fellowship. She has an active studio practice in which oil paint is her primary
medium. Sullivan has an MFA in painting from the University of Mississippi and
a BFA from the University of South Alabama. She is a professor of art and the
director of the Eichold Gallery at Spring Hill College.
Nicholas ‘Nic’ Tisdale of Alabaster was awarded a
Visual Arts Fellowship. His work fuses broken digital imagery with printmaking
to critique mass media’s evolution, exposing digital flaws and challenging
traditional print and media conventions. Tisdale has an MA and MFA in printmaking
from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and a BFA from the University of
Montevallo. He serves as a visiting assistant professor at Jacksonville State
University.
Viktoria Truesdail of Madison was awarded an Arts
Education Fellowship. She is the general music teacher at Horizon Elementary
School, and also teaches at Mill Creek Elementary School and Midtown Elementary
School. Truesdail is passionate about sharing knowledge with fellow music
educators and has presented sessions at the Alabama Music Education Association
conference on bucket drumming and cardio drumming.
Joseph Villalobos of Huntsville was awarded a Dance
Fellowship. He has danced for numerous companies, including Ballet Arkansas,
Nevada Ballet Theatre, Ballet Theatre of Maryland, and Montgomery Ballet,
originating several featured roles in neo-classical and contemporary pieces,
while also enjoying major roles in the classics. As an educator, Villalobos
emphasizes technique, injury prevention, and longevity in the
field.
Erika E. Wade of Birmingham was awarded a Theatre
Fellowship. She is a writer, producer, and actor dedicated to advancing
diversity in the arts. Her original work has been produced Off-Broadway and in
festivals nationwide, and her short film, KNOWING, developed through the
Southern Exposure Film Fellowship, has screened internationally. Wade is also a
five-time Emmy Award–winning voice actress and serves as film instructor at the
Alabama School of Fine Arts.
Rebecca Wall of Auburn was awarded an Arts Education Fellowship.
She teaches art at Richland Elementary School, offers private art lessons, and
volunteers with community organizations. Wall is passionate about ceramics and
enjoys creating nature-inspired sculpture, often experimenting with altered
wheel-thrown objects and slip-cast forms. She currently serves as president of
the Alabama Art Education Association.
Laura Wilkerson of Springville was awarded an Arts
Education Fellowship. She is the visual arts teacher at Springville Middle
School, where she guides students through advanced techniques while encouraging
experimentation, problem-solving, and individual voice. Wilkerson also works as
a professional photographer, and her work has been featured in well-known
magazines and is in the permanent collection at the Abroms-Engel Institute for
the Visual Arts.
|
Name
|
City
|
County
|
Amount
|
Fellowship
|
|
Vikash
Achutaramaiah
|
Montgomery
|
Montgomery
|
$7,500
|
Music
Fellowship
|
|
Garrett
Ashley
|
Opelika
|
Lee
|
$7,500
|
Prose
Fellowship
|
|
Taylor
Barlow
|
Huntsville
|
Madison
|
$7,500
|
Music
Fellowship
|
|
James
Braziel
|
Remlap
|
Blount
|
$7,500
|
Prose
Fellowship
|
|
Tina
Mozelle Braziel
|
Remlap
|
Blount
|
$7,500
|
Poetry
Fellowship
|
|
Jillian
Marie Browning
|
Birmingham
|
Shelby
|
$7,500
|
Gay
Burke Photography Fellowship
|
|
Stacey
Edwards
|
Greenville
|
Butler
|
$7,500
|
Visual
Arts Fellowship
|
|
Amy
Feger
|
Montevallo
|
Shelby
|
$7,500
|
Visual
Arts Fellowship
|
|
Scott
Fisk
|
Homewood
|
Jefferson
|
$7,500
|
Design
Fellowship
|
|
Susie
Garrett
|
Huntsville
|
Madison
|
$7,500
|
Craft
Fellowship
|
|
Maria
Kuznetsova
|
Auburn
|
Lee
|
$7,500
|
Prose
Fellowship
|
|
Kwoya Fagin
Maples
|
Vestavia Hills
|
Jefferson
|
$7,500
|
Poetry
Fellowship
|
|
Bobby
Mathews
|
Hoover
|
Jefferson
|
$7,500
|
Prose
Fellowship
|
|
Millian
Pham
|
Opelika
|
Lee
|
$7,500
|
Visual
Arts Fellowship
|
|
Chiharu
Takahashi Roach
|
Birmingham
|
Jefferson
|
$7,500
|
Visual
Arts Fellowship
|
|
Jessica
Smith
|
Tuscaloosa
|
Tuscaloosa
|
$7,500
|
Craft
Fellowship
|
|
Wanda
Sullivan
|
Mobile
|
Mobile
|
$7,500
|
Visual
Arts Fellowship
|
|
Nicholas
'Nic' Tisdale
|
Alabaster
|
Shelby
|
$7,500
|
Visual
Arts Fellowship
|
|
Viktoria
Truesdail
|
Madison
|
Madison
|
$7,500
|
Arts
Educator Fellowship
|
|
Joseph
Villalobos
|
Huntsville
|
Madison
|
$7,500
|
Dance
Fellowship
|
|
Erika
E. Wade
|
Birmingham
|
Jefferson
|
$7,500
|
Theatre
Fellowship
|
|
Rebecca
Wall
|
Auburn
|
Lee
|
$7,500
|
Arts
Educator Fellowship
|
|
Laura Wilkerson
|
Springville
|
St.
Clair
|
$7,500
|
Arts
Educator Fellowship
|
This funding is awarded for the 2027 fiscal year (October 1,
2026 – September 30, 2027) and is made possible by the Alabama Legislature and
the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
The Alabama State Council on the Arts grants portal will
re-open on July 1, 2026, for project grants for organizations and Folk Arts
Apprenticeship requests.
For more information and updates, visit arts.alabama.gov.
# # #
About Alabama State Council on the Arts
The Council on the Arts is the official state agency for the support and
development of the arts in Alabama. The Council works to expand and preserve
the state’s cultural resources by supporting nonprofit arts organizations,
schools, colleges, units of local government, and individual artists. Arts
programs, assisted by Council grants, have a track record of enhancing
community development, education, cultural tourism, and overall quality of life
in all regions of the state. Alabama State Council on the Arts grants are made
possible by an annual appropriation from the Alabama Legislature and additional
funds from the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.