Like most terrible things these days, the notice came via email. The message was succinct and impersonal to Marie Myung-Ok Lee, a writer who had spent years preparing for an NEA fellowship application—carefully putting together a proposal about her Korean immigrant father’s imprisonment and suicide. For the fiscal year 2026, the NEA had discontinued its Creative Writing Fellowships program. The category had been eliminated. With a hint of bureaucracy, the email went on to say that “receiving this news can be disappointing.” The situation was probably understated.
The official language of grant cycles and budget announcements tends to flatten into abstraction, but that moment, which takes place in the last heat of a New York City summer, captures something significant about what is actually happening at the National Endowment for the Arts right now. The NEA has endured. The agency’s budget and, most importantly, the long-standing mandate that 40% of grant funding go to state and regional arts organizations that reach every congressional district in the nation were preserved when Congress passed and the President signed FY2026 funding at $207 million. That appears to be a clear victory for the arts community from a certain vantage point. Upon closer inspection, the image becomes much more hazy.
The NEA’s use of that $207 million has undergone significant change. Fostering AI competency in creative curricula, commemorating America’s 250th anniversary, supporting workforce development for arts educators, and reaching underserved institutions, such as historically Black colleges and Hispanic-serving schools, are the new priorities of the agency’s Grants for Arts Projects program, which funds public engagement and arts education. There are no longer any individual creative writing fellowships, which used to provide working writers with up to $50,000. It’s not a subtle change from supporting individual artists to supporting institutional initiatives with quantifiable community impact. Depending on your point of view, it’s either a clear indication of whose innovation the federal government believes is worthwhile investing in or a pragmatic recalibration toward scale and access.

As this develops, it seems as though the NEA is attempting to walk a tightrope between maintaining the idea that individual artists are important and proving relevance and reach in a political climate that is openly hostile to cultural spending. Writers and humanities educators have been particularly irritated by the AI competency priority, pointing out with grim irony that the government seems more interested in funding programs that teach people how to collaborate with AI than in supporting the human creative work that AI systems are trained to mimic. This was precisely the point made in Lee’s rejection letter, which also stated that the NEA would “prioritize projects that foster AI competency.” Put another way, replace the writer with the prompt engineer.
The institutional shift may actually increase access to creative education in ways that individual fellowships were never able to. This conflict has always existed for the NEA; 35 fellowship recipients in a nation of 330 million people is, by all accounts, a small funnel. A $50,000 fellowship to a novelist in New York or Providence might never reach classrooms and students if more funds were routed through school districts, community arts organizations, and workforce training programs. The National Assembly of State Arts Agencies has expressed cautious optimism regarding the 40% state allocation that has been maintained, pointing out that it maintains the distribution of federal arts funding through truly local channels. That argument isn’t entirely incorrect.
However, when the federal arts agency disregards individual artistic vision as something worth preserving on its own terms, something is also lost. Alice Walker, Louise Erdrich, Sandra Cisneros, and Percival Everett have all received NEA fellowships in the past. These authors’ works did not neatly fit into any government priority list, but they went on to transform American literature and culture in ways that no committee could have foreseen or planned. The case for supporting artists is similar to the case for funding research in that it’s not always possible to predict what will be important. Cutting a budget line is not the only effect of canceling the fellowships. It shuts a door that was already closed and implies that the government has determined with some degree of certainty what kind of innovation is worthy of public support.
It is genuinely unclear whether the 2026 reorganization signifies a true increase in funding for creative education or a more circumspect retreat into politically viable, quantifiable, and defensible programming. The NEA is still in existence. It continues to write checks. It has just subtly altered the envelope’s address.
Disclaimer
Nothing published on Creative Learning Guild — including news articles, legal news, lawsuit summaries, settlement guides, legal analysis, financial commentary, expert opinion, educational content, or any other material — constitutes legal advice, financial advice, investment advice, or professional counsel of any kind. All content on this website is provided strictly for informational, educational, and news reporting purposes only. Consult your legal or financial advisor before taking any step.
