70th Otero Arts Festival Showcases Student Talent Across Southeast Colorado, Announces 2026 Winners
Description: Photo Description: Community members peruse the art displayed during the Otero Arts Festival. Otero College’s 70th Arts Festival highlights student talent in writing, music, and visual arts, with winners announced from schools across Southeast Colorado.
Otero College Celebrates 70th Annual Arts Festival with 2,000+ Student Entries and 2026 Winners
Seventy years ago, the Otero Arts Festival began as a small art contest designed to give middle and high school students an opportunity to showcase their artistic talents. Today, the festival—sponsored by Otero College—has grown into one of the longest-running and most celebrated student arts events in Southeast Colorado, highlighting excellence in visual arts, music, theatre, and creative writing.
The 70th Annual Otero Arts Festival continued this proud tradition, drawing more than 2,000 entries in recent years and showcasing the creativity of students from across the region. This year alone, the festival featured over 130 creative writing entries, 6 creative books, 26 musical performances, 21 visual arts senior portfolios, and hundreds of visual art pieces displayed throughout the week in the Rizzuto Banquet Room.
Winners were recognized during the official Awards Ceremony on April 2.
Judges for this year's festival included:
Music: James Lind and Dean Rees
Visual Arts: Zeke Ayala and Cody Miell
Creative Writing: CSU-Pueblo President's Leadership and Honors Program students
In this year's Creative Writing competition, students across grade levels 7-12th were honored in Poetry, Essays, and Short Stories, demonstrating exceptional creativity and depth of expression. In the Music competition students competed in vocal solos, ensembles, and instrumental performances, with La Junta Jr/Sr High School and Swink Schools strongly represented among the winners. The Visual Arts competition once again filled the Rizzuto Banquet Room with hundreds of student works. In addition to top awards, numerous first-through-honorable mention awards were given.
Creative Writing Winners, 2026
Overall Best Work – Junior Division
Winner: Brendon Sniff, "I'm NOT the Plot" — Walsh RE1 (Instructor: Pamela Batterton)
Overall Best Work – Senior Division
Winner: Samantha McCoy, "The Bag Between the Boots" — Cheraw High School (Instructor: Timothy Snyder)
Maria Lavin, Recipient of the Otero College Creative Writing Scholarship
Scholarship Winner
Winner: Maria Lavin — La Junta Jr/Sr High School (Instructor: Julie Meiklejohn)
Scholarship Alternate
Winner: Bella Ortiz — Rocky Ford Jr/Sr High School (Instructor: Bea Jae Viescas)
Creative Books
Best Overall Book: Conner Prindavong, "Diary of Elaine" — Swink Jr/Sr High School (Instructor: Bonnie Grossen)
Most Original Book: Bobbijo Lindt, "A Few Broken Years with a Few Broken Pieces" — Swink Jr/Sr High School (Instructor: Bonnie Grossen)
Most Creative Book: Abigail Hill, "King of Hearts Tour" — Swink Jr/Sr High School (Instructor: Bonnie Grossen)
Best Storyline Book: Analeia Hand, "Patch Work" — Swink Jr/Sr High School (Instructor: Bonnie Grossen)
Honorable Mention: Miley James, "Cattle Trails and Poetic Tales" — Swink Jr/Sr High School (Instructor: Bonnie Grossen)
Senior Portfolios
1st Place: Maria Lavin — Six; Laws Criminalizing LGBT+ are Hate Crimes; Siblings or Lovers — La Junta Jr/Sr High School (Instructor: Julie Meiklejohn)
2nd Place: Bella Ortiz — A Beast of Snow; The Mystery of Love; Scars of Time — Rocky Ford Jr/Sr High School (Instructor: Bea Jae Viescas)
3rd Place: Tyler Fehrenbach — WW1 Poem; Robber Barons; The Mystery Man — Rocky Ford Jr/Sr High School (Instructor: Bea Jae Viescas)
4th Place: Oakley Jones — Growing Up; Figuring It Out; "Have You Seen ___" — La Junta Jr/Sr High School (Instructor: Julie Meiklejohn)
Honorable Mention: Juan Murillo — Guilt; Cause and Effect; Chaos Approaching — Rocky Ford Jr/Sr High School (Instructor: Bea Jae Viescas)
Poetry
7th Grade Poetry
1st Place: Kamiah Tapia, "Who Deserves It?" — Rocky Ford Jr/Sr High School (Instructor: Tamara Mameda)
For seven decades, the Otero Arts Festival has provided a platform for young artists to explore their talents, build confidence, and share their voices with the community. The continued growth of the festival reflects the strength of arts education in Southeast Colorado and the dedication of educators, students, and community supporters.
"Otero College is proud to continue this long-standing tradition," festival coordinator, Malorie McNames, shared. "The talent, creativity, and passion displayed by these students is truly inspiring and speaks to the importance of the arts in education."
Otero College extends its sincere appreciation to all participating students, instructors, judges, and community partners who helped make the 70th Annual Otero Arts Festival a success.
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