Our Work

Current Awardees

The Bright Lights Awards

Each fall the LEH seeks public nominations for six of the Bright Lights Awards—Humanities Book of the Year, Humanities Documentary Film of the Year, Museum Exhibition of the Year or Digital Humanities of the Year (biennial awards), Light Up for Literacy, Documentary Photographer of the Year (formerly the Michael P. Smith Award for Documentary Photography), and Lifetime Contributions to the Humanities.

The Humanist of the Year, Champion of Culture, and Chair’s Award for Institutional Support are nominated and chosen in-house by members of the LEH board of directors. 

Awards in the publicly nominated categories are selected by special committees made up of local experts in the field and LEH staff and board members. Recipients are announced at the beginning of the next year.  

THE 2025 BRIGHT LIGHTS AWARDS RECIPIENTS

Humanist of the Year

Awarded in partnership with the Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana and given to an individual for invaluable, lasting, and recognized contributions to Louisiana’s cultural landscape

2025 Humanist of the Year

Dr. Norman C. Francis

The 2024 LEH Humanist of the Year is Dr. Norman C. Francis. A native of Lafayette, Louisiana, Dr. Francis was the first black student at Loyola University New Orleans and the first black president of Xavier University of Louisiana, serving from 1968 to 2015. Dr. Francis’s work as a civil leader, academic, educator and Louisiana culture bearer has had a profound impact on Louisianans and non-Louisianans alike.

Francis has served on the Educational Testing Service, The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, the Southern Education Foundation and the American Association of Higher Education. He is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, having received 35 honorary degrees, including a Doctorate of Humanities, and a member of the Vatican’s Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace. Francis served as chairman of the Louisiana Recovery Authority, charged with the rebuilding of Louisiana after hurricanes Katrina and Rita.

In 2006, Francis was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by George W. Bush.

Dr. Francis retired in 2015 after being honored as the nation’s longest-serving college president.

Chair’s Award for Institutional Support

Awarded in recognition of significant financial or programmatic support of the LEH’s mission and programs

2025 Chair’s Award for Institutional Support

Willie Landry Mount

This year’s awardee, Willie Landry Mount, a Lake Charles native, was the first female mayor of Lake Charles and served on the Louisiana State Senate.

Mount served on the Senate Committees on Coastal Restoration and Flood Control, Revenue and Fiscal Affairs, Senate Committee on Education, and Senate Committee on Health and Welfare. Mount served on the Board of Directors of the LEH from 2013 to 2024, serving as Chair of the Board in the 2020-21 fiscal year, leading the LEH through the COVID-19 pandemic.

Mount has supported LEH’s advocacy efforts at the state and national levels, attending numerous advocacy events in support of LEH and offering strategic guidance at the state level as part of the legislative task force. Mount’s pivotal support of LEH initiatives has been integral to LEH’s ongoing commitment to building a lifelong love of learning, literacy, and leadership for Louisianans of all backgrounds.

Champion of Culture Award

Awarded to individuals or organizations that have made a lasting mark through their support and promotion of Louisiana’s cultural resources

2025 Champion of Culture Award

Festivals Acadiens et Créoles

This year’s Champion of Culture awardee is Festivals Acadiens et Créoles. Held in Lafayette, it is the world’s largest Cajun and Creole festival.

Co-founded and directed by folklorist, poet, and ethnomusicologist Barry Ancelet, Festivals Acadiens et Créoles merged existing festivals together to champion the creativity and cultural contributions of Cajun and Creole customs. The festival celebrated its 50th year in 2024 and generates over $11 million for Lafayette Parish.

Since 2008, the festival has given back over $100,000 in community initiatives. From the foundations of each festival in the 1970s, to the official creation of the co-op in 2008, to the celebrations of the festivals in present day, Festivals Acadiens et Créoles sees over 125,000 each year, coming from across the country and even the globe.

Documentary Photographer of the Year

Honors documentary photographers whose work captures Louisiana’s history, culture, and/or peoples.

2025 Documentary Photographer of the Year

Pableaux Johnson

Pableaux Johnson, a native of New Iberia, is a New Orleans-based photographer and food writer.

Johnson has been capturing all facets of New Orleans culture since 2001 and is known for his documentation of outdoor performance traditions. Johnson has published several books, solo exhibitions, and documentaries. His work has appeared in the New York Times, Bitter Southerner, Southern Living, Bon Appetit, and many others.

Humanities Book of the Year

Awarded to the book that best exemplifies scholarship on Louisiana topics or by Louisiana writers

2025 Humanities Book of the Year

The Carceral City: Slavery and the Making of Mass Incarceration in New Orleans, 1803-1930 by John Bardes

In The Carceral City: Slavery and the Making of Mass Incarceration in New Orleans, 1803-1930, Dr. John Bardes, a professor at Louisiana State University, outlines the relationship between slavery and prison development. Bardes examines 127 years of the city that has had the highest incarceration rates in the country.

Humanities Documentary Film of the Year

Awarded to the documentary film that best exemplifies scholarship on Louisiana topics or by Louisiana documentary filmmakers

2025 Humanities Documentary Film of the Year

Ancestral Artistry: The Influence of Africans and Creoles of Color on Louisiana Architecture produced by the Louisiana Architecture Foundation

The Louisiana Architecture Foundation’s Ancestral Artistry: The Influence of Africans and Creoles of Color on Louisiana Architecture explores the rich cultural legacy of early Africans and Creoles of Culture through Louisiana’s architecture. The film examines Louisiana’s roots across the globe throughout time, showcasing modern-day master craftspeople preserving the legacy of their ancestors. 

Light Up for Literacy Award

Honors individuals who have made significant and lasting contributions to literacy efforts in the state

Presented in partnership with the State Library of Louisiana’s Center for the Book

2025 Light Up for Literacy Award

Lt. Michael Brooks

Lt. Michael Brooks, of the Ascension Parish Sheriff’s Office Hickley M. Waguespack Center, works as a beacon of education and community advocate. His efforts, which include serving as a vibrant storyteller for Prime Time Family Reading sessions at the WAG Center, have led to an outsized impact on youth literacy across the region.

Lifetime Contributions to the Humanities Award

Honors citizens who have supported and been involved in public appreciation of issues central to the humanities

2025 Lifetime Contributions to the Humanities Awards

Jim Davis

Jim Davis is the Executive Director of the Louisiana Center for the Book and the Louisiana Book Festival at the State Library of Louisiana. Under Davis’s direction, the Louisiana Book Festival has become one of the nation’s foremost book festivals, amassing over 20,000 visitors each year, advancing a love of literature and strengthening communities in each of Louisiana’s 64 parishes.

Best in Digital Humanities

Awarded biannually in odd-numbered years, the Best in Digital Humanities award recognizes publicly accessible digital humanities projects produced in the previous two calendar years (2023 and 2024) including websites, virtual exhibitions, podcasts and other born-digital initiatives that bring new insights to and/or significantly improve the public’s understanding of the state, its history, and/or its culture.

2025 Museum Exhibition of the Year

“A Closer Walk: New Orleans Music History, Block by Block

“A Closer Walk: New Orleans Music History, Block by Block,” digitally hosted by WWOZ, showcases a digital guide of important locations in the musical history of New Orleans. Boasting curated tours and an interactive map of the city, “A Closer Walk” can be filtered by time period, neighborhood, or music genre to follow the city’s musical journey.

Click here for a full list of past Humanities Awards winners.