Eligibility:
- Artists 18 years of age or older, at any stage of their career. Applicant does not need to be a student.
- Applicant can not be an Artaxis member. If you have already been accepted to Artaxis, you are not eligible for the fellowship.
- Artists must demonstrate financial need in their letter of intent.
- The Fellowship is designed to offer an experience that would otherwise not be possible for the applicant; priority will be given to applicants with less experience in workshops, residencies, or similar opportunities.
- This Fellowship is open to US-based and international applicants. Artaxis will provide international applicants with letters of invitation, but cannot offer additional funding or support with acquiring a visa.
- Artaxis often asks Fellows to be involved in programming to help promote the fellow, their work, and the Artaxis Fellowship. If selected for the Fellowship, you agree to be involved when asked.
- You agree to complete a fellowship report within 30 days after the workshop.
The 2025 Artaxis Fellowship is supported by Artaxis members and funded by Haystack Mountain School of Crafts to nurture talent within creatively driven individuals by offering financial support to underrepresented artists.
Deadline for applications: Sunday, December 22nd, 2024.
If you have any questions, please email us at contactartaxis@gmail.com.
Meet our 2025 Artaxis Fellowship Selection Committee:
Didem Mert
Didem Mert (she/they) was born and raised in Cincinnati, OH. Mert received their BFA (ceramics) from Northern Kentucky University in 2014 and MFA (ceramics) from Edinboro University of Pennsylvania in 2017. Mert has exhibited nationally in places such as The Clay Studio, AKAR, The Archie Bray Gallery, The Erie Art Museum, and over forty other venues. They were featured on the cover of Pottery Making Illustrated’s January/February 2016 issue. Mert was included on CFile’s list of 15 Potters to Watch in 2016 and Architectural Digest’s 10 Ceramic Artists Giving Pottery A Modern Update. They were one of Ceramics Monthly’s Emerging Artists of 2018. Mert was a summer resident at the Archie Bray Foundation in 2018 and a visiting artist in 2024. Didem currently lives in Sebastopol, CA, and works as a full-time studio potter and workshop instructor.
Donté K. Hayes
Donté K. Hayes graduated summa cum laude from Kennesaw State University in Georgia with a BFA in Ceramics and Printmaking with an Art History minor. Donté received his MA and MFA with honors from the University of Iowa and is the 2017 recipient of the University of Iowa Arts Fellowship. Donté has been awarded residencies at MacDowell, Bemis Center, Haystack Mountain School of Crafts, Penland, Township 10 and Watershed. His work is included in the permanent collections of the Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian Museum of American Art, Minnesota Museum of American Art, Newark Museum of Art, Museum of Fine Arts Houston, Stanley Museum of Art and Crocker Art Museum, among others. Donté is a 2019 Ceramics Monthly Magazine Emerging Artists and an Artaxis Fellow.
George Rodriguez
Born and raised in the border city of El Paso, TX, George Rodriguez creates highly ornamented, ceramic sculptures. His guardian figures, tomb sculptures, and installations, commemorate and build community. Recent projects include a permanent installation at the new Kansas City International Airport and an outdoor public sculpture at CASA of Maryland, an immigration advocacy organization in Baltimore. His sculptures are part of the collections of the National Museum of Mexican Art, Chicago, IL; Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington D.C., and the National Museum in Stockholm, Sweden. Rodriguez holds a BFA from the University of Texas El Paso and an MFA from the University of Washington, Seattle. He is an Assistant Professor at the Tyler School of Art and Architecture in Philadelphia.
The 2025 Artaxis Fellowship is generously supported by Haystack Mountain School of Crafts.
Haystack Mountain School of Crafts is an international craft school located on the Atlantic Ocean in Deer Isle, Maine.
Application checklist:
** The following information must be compiled into one PDF and uploaded as one document.
Images of five (5) works, with one (1) optional detail image for each work.
A description of images – i.e. title, material, size, relevant information.
One page letter of intent written by the applicant, including why you think the overall experience of attending a summer Haystack session would impact your work. We ask applicants NOT to address specific Summer 2025 workshops in their application materials. Please include one paragraph addressing financial need.
Contact information for two references (name, title, phone number, and email).
Resume of applicant; including website or link to professional social media account, if applicable.
Compile all materials into one PDF and submit via the application form on this page by December 22nd, 2024
Timeline:
- Deadline for applications: December 22nd, 2024
- Review of applications: December 23rd – January 14th, 2025
- Fellowship recipient will be notified on or around January 15th, 2025
- Public announcement of recipient will be in February, 2025
Upload form:
By submitting your application, you agree to comply with Artaxis Organization Inc’s copyright: Artaxis.org/Copyright-Notice/
Meet 2024 Artaxis Fellow, Bianca Turner:
Lucky Moe is a Southeast Asian Ceramist from Rakhine, Burma. The style of her works is inspired by nostalgia for childhood memories from her time growing up in Burma. Lucky started her art career in Illustraton. Her process includes transforming her drawings into figurative sculptures to tell various stories from her life.
Meet 2024 Artaxis Fellow, Jerrie Fabrigas:
Lucky Moe is a Southeast Asian Ceramist from Rakhine, Burma. The style of her works is inspired by nostalgia for childhood memories from her time growing up in Burma. Lucky started her art career in Illustraton. Her process includes transforming her drawings into figurative sculptures to tell various stories from her life.
Meet 2023 Artaxis Fellow, Lucky Moe:
Lucky Moe is a Southeast Asian Ceramist from Rakhine, Burma. The style of her works is inspired by nostalgia for childhood memories from her time growing up in Burma. Lucky started her art career in Illustraton. Her process includes transforming her drawings into figurative sculptures to tell various stories from her life.
Meet 2023 Artaxis Fellow, Alvaro Villa:
Alvaro Villa describes his creative practice as a form of magic. He is a Dallas, Texas based multidisciplinary artist whose work focuses primarily in working with the figure and familiar objects in ceramics. His work branches across different modes of art making from painting, sculpture, and performance art, all stemming from the ability to take his energy and ideas of spirituality, witchcraft/brujeria, astrology, tarot, and his memories and experiences through the lens of his queer and Latino identity into manifested reality. He recently graduated from the University of North Texas where he earned his three degrees in Studio Art with a concentration in Ceramics, Sculpture and Drawing & Painting, as well as a minor in Art History.
Meet 2022 Artaxis Fellow, Jayne King:
Jayne King is a Chicago-born Jewish artist in their last semester of undergraduate study at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where they’ve spent their time focusing on ceramics, object collection, and book making. Their ceramic studio practice aims to ask questions about the nature of memory, the haunted space, and the chain of living connection through the reconsideration of the heirloom porcelain object. The goal of the work is to explore the intersections between the human desire to safeguard personal narrative and nostalgia, the history of ceramic objects as vessels for storage and preservation, and the ways in which Jewish tradition informs how King has come to understand their relationship to their ancestor’s past and the consequential present. They are graduating from SAIC’s BFA program in May 2022, and are currently a resident artist at The Digs Chicago.
Learn more about Jayne here: https://www.jaynemarieking.com/
Meet 2022 Artaxis Fellow, Eugene Ofori Agyei:
Eugene Ofori Agyei (1993) is a ceramic sculptor, fiber and installation artist and an educator originally from Ghana living in Gainesville, Florida. He graduated from Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology in Kumasi, Ghana with a BA in Industrial Art, majoring in Ceramics in 2018. Prior to his MFA at the University of Florida, he was assigned as teaching and research assistant in the same school where he received his BA for one year. Eugene is the 2020/2021 recipient of the University of Florida Grinter Fellowship award and 2022 Artaxis Fellowship award.
Meet 2020 Artaxis Fellow, Nyasha Madamombe:
Learn more about Nyasha here: https://nyashamadamombe.com/
Meet 2020 Artaxis Fellow, Nicole McLaughlin:
Nicole McLaughlin was born and raised in Massachusetts but spent much of her early childhood in Mexico. As a first generation Mexican-American, she is heavily influenced by her multicultural upbringing and her childhood memories of visiting her mother’s home town of Cuernavaca, Mexico. Nicole received her Bachelor of Fine Arts from the Kansas City Art Institute in Kansas City, MO. She has exhibited nationally, internationally, and has work in several private collections. Currently, she serves as the Ceramics Teaching Fellow at Tabor Academy in Marion, MA. Nicole continues to draw inspiration from Mexican ceramics, textiles, and cultural traditions in hopes of showing how her life has been shaped by a collision of two cultures.
Learn more about Nicole here: https://www.nicoleamclaughlin.com/
Artaxis Conversations with Nyasha Madamombe and Nicole McLaughlin:
Listen to an Artaxis Conversations interview with Artaxis Board President, Bobby Tso and our 2020 Artaxis Fellows, Nyasha Madamombe and Nicole McLaughlin.Meet 2019 Artaxis Fellow, Moises Salazar:
Moises Salazar is a non-binary queer artist from in Chicago. They currently attend the School of the Art Institute of Chicago Undergraduate Program were they primarily focus in ceramic sculpture and painting. Being born queer and to immigrant parents has cemented a conflict within Moises Salazar’s political identity, which is the conceptual focus of their practice. The work of Moises Salazar is meant to to showcase the trauma, history, and current state that undocumented immigrants and queer folk face. It is by examining the intersections of race, ethnicity, nationality, gender, queerness and the United States history that Moises Salazar addresses the reality of the barriers that immigrants and queer individuals face with the intention to begin to dismantle the myths and stereotypes used to criminalize and dehumanize them.
Learn more about Moises Salazar and their work here: https://www.moisessalazar.com/
Meet 2019 Artaxis Fellow, Donté Hayes:
Learn more about Donté Hayes here: https://dontekhayes.com/
Meet 2018 Artaxis Fellow, Raven Halfmoon:
Learn more about Raven Halfmoon and her work here: http://www.ravenhalfmoon.com/
Meet 2018 Artaxis Fellow, Kathy Garcia:
Learn more about Kathy Garcia and her work here: http://www.kathy-garcia.com/
Meet 2017 Artaxis Fellow, Soe Yu Nwe:
Learn more about Soe Yu Nwe and her work here: https://www.soeyunwe.com/
Meet 2016 Artaxis Fellow, Natalia Arbalaez:
Learn more about Natalia and her work here: http://nataliaarbelaez.com/