2026 State of the Art Prize, Alaska

2026 State of the Art Prize, Alaska

Katie Baldwin Basile

Katie Baldwin Basile

Katie Baldwin Basile is a photojournalist, documentary photographer and filmmaker with a focus on her home, the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta region of Alaska.

Discipline:

Photography, Social Practice, Socially-Engaged Visual Art, Visual Arts

Award Year:

2026

A flap of tundra hangs off of an eroding island exposing thawing permafrost near Kasigluk, Alaska on July. 11, 2023.
Jasmin Kassaiuli plays hide-and-seek in Mertarvik, Alaska on July 14, 2020.

About Katie Baldwin Basile

Bethel, AK

Katie Baldwin Basile Katie Baldwin Basile is a photojournalist, documentary photographer and filmmaker with a focus on her home, the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta region of Alaska. Basile’s work has appeared on PBS NewsHour and in The Washington Post Magazine, NPR, The New York Times and High Country News Magazine. Katie began her career as a teaching artist and has more than a decade of experience collaborating on multimedia stories with rural Alaskan youth. From Yup’ik kayak building to the high teacher turnover rate, youth-led storytelling continues to expand Katie’s understanding of traditional and contemporary rural Alaska. Katie is a We, Women Photo and IWMF grantee and the co-recipient of a National Edward R. Murrow Award for excellence in video through her work at KYUK Public Media. She directed the award-winning short film “To Keep as One” in collaboration with the Newtok Village Council which premiered at the 2020 Big Sky Film Festival. Katie lives in Bethel, Alaska with her husband and two young sons.

Katie Baldwin Basile is a photojournalist, documentary photographer and filmmaker with a focus on her home, the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta region of Alaska. Basile’s work has appeared on PBS NewsHour and in The Washington Post Magazine, NPR, The New York Times and High Country News Magazine. Katie began her career as a teaching artist and has more than a decade of experience collaborating on multimedia stories with rural Alaskan youth. From Yup’ik kayak building to the high teacher turnover rate, youth-led storytelling continues to expand Katie’s understanding of traditional and contemporary rural Alaska. Katie is a We, Women Photo and IWMF grantee and the co-recipient of a National Edward R. Murrow Award for excellence in video through her work at KYUK Public Media. She directed the award-winning short film “To Keep as One” in collaboration with the Newtok Village Council which premiered at the 2020 Big Sky Film Festival. Katie lives in Bethel, Alaska with her husband and two young sons.

Katie Baldwin Basile