ATLANTA, GA.- MOCA GAs Working Artist Project (WAP) was developed in support of established artists in the Metropolitan Atlanta area. Each year the program is funded by the Charles Loridans Foundation, the Antinori Foundation, the PNC Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts. Including the three Fellows announced today, there are a total of 48 Fellows over the past 18 years. As a museum that is dedicated first and foremost to supporting Georgias contemporary artists, it is MOCA GAs goal to encourage these artists to remain in our city to establish Atlanta as one of the best cities for launching a viable career in the arts.
This legacy initiative provides an unparalleled level of support for individual artists, expands the Museums mission, and promotes Atlanta as a city where artists can live, work, and thrive. MOCA GA supports artists by granting a major stipend to create new work; by presenting a solo exhibition of the new work; by producing an accompanying exhibition catalogue; and by providing paid studio apprentices over the course of one year, Annette Cone-Skelton, Director of MOCA GA
David Brenneman is The Director and CEO of the Telfair Museums of Art in Savannah, Georgia, where he is guiding the museums exhibition and art acquisitions program. In spring and summer of 2026, the Telfair will host an exhibition titled Off the Coast of Paradise: Ossabaw Island, Georgia, 1961-now, curated by Telfairs curator of contemporary art, Erin Dunn, and Guest curator, Beryl Gilothwest. Prior to coming to the Telfair Museums, he became the Director of the Eskenazi Museum of Art at Indiana University, where he created the Universitys first curator of contemporary art position; Supervised the renovation of the museums signature I M Pei building and found ways for their substantial collections of more than 45,000 works of art to become more accessible and engaging for their 40,000+ students, faculty, and staff. This resulted in a new time- based media space and the acquisition of numerous works by such artists as Leonardo Drew, Kara Walker, and Shahzia Sikander. High Museum of Art, Atlanta, (1995) beginning a 20-year tenure; He facilitated the acquisition of major works of Contemporary art by such artists as Julie Mehretu, Anish Kapoor, and Alex Katz; He initiated a focus on collecting works on paper by Atlanta based artists; and worked with successive curators of decorative art and design to establish a contemporary design program.
Georgia based artist Yanique Norman received her MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (2018) and her BFA from Georgia State University (2014). Her work has been exhibited at the prominent institutions including the High Museum, Zuckerman Museum, Albany Museum, Atlanta Contemporary, Athens Institute for Contemporary Art, University of Virginia, California State University, Florida Atlantic University, University of Central Florida, Columbus University, and Wofford College, as well as galleries such as Goldfinch and MARCH. Norman has received numerous awards and grants, including the Nexus Fund (2024), Foundation for Contemporary Arts Emergency Grants (2022,2019), The Individual Artist Career Opportunity Grant (2022), United States Relief Grant (2021) Artadia Award (2020), National Museum of Women in the Arts of Georgia Grant (2020) and the Susan Antinori Visual Artist Grant (2019). She is the author of DECOLONIALITY IN THE BREAK OF GLOBAL BLACKNESS: MOVEMENT, METHOD, POETHEICS, published by Routledge in May 2025, with a second book, MALLEABLE and TRUE, forthcoming from Brink publication in September 2025
Wilay Méndez Páez is an Afro-Cuban artist whose work explores the intersections of everyday life, urban space, and human connection through the lens of his identity as a Black Hispanic Caribbean man. Born and raised in Cuba, Méndez Páez has exhibited widely in Havana and across the island, as well as internationally in Germany, the United States, and the United Kingdom. Since relocating to Atlanta in 2019, his work has been featured in numerous solo and group exhibitions. From 2020-2022, he served as an artist in residence at the Clark Atlanta University Art Museum, where he deepened his engagement in the citys cultural and historical landscape. His art bridges geographies and communities, offering an intimate yet critical vision of urban life shaped by race, displacement, and creative survival.
Steven L. Anderson is and Atlanta- based curator, and arts organizer. He is co-founder and Co-director of Day & Night Projects, an artist-run gallery in Atlanta since 2016. Anderson is a graduate of the University of Michigan and The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. He has exhibited in galleries and museums throughout the United States since 1996. His artworks are found in the Microsoft Art Collection, The Tim and Lauren Schrager Collection, and in the collections of Fulton County Public Arts, Coca-Cola Inc., Emory University Hospitals, the National Park Service, and others. Anderson is a recipient of the 2023 Idea Capital grant, and two-time winner of the Artist Project Grant from the City of Atlanta Mayors Office of Cultural Affairs, recent residencies include Uncool Artist Residency (Brooklyn, NY), Yes, We Cannibal (Baton Rouge, LA), Blue Heron Nature Preserve (Atlanta, GA) Château dOrquevaux (Orquevaux, FR). Anderson has been a Studio Artist at Atlanta Contemporary, and a WonderRoot Walthall Artist Fellow. Anderson lives in Atlanta with his wife Liz and son Finn.