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 2026 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

2026 Humanist of the Year

Michael Doucet

The 2026 LEH Humanist of the Year is Michael Doucet. A Louisiana singer-songwriter and native of Scott, La., Michael Doucet is the founder of BeauSoleil, a Cajun band formed in 1975 in Lafayette. BeauSoleil, or BeauSoleil with Michael Doucet, tours internationally and is among the best-known Cajun bands globally, having been featured on film soundtracks, talk shows, and at music festivals across the world. BeauSoleil has received 13 Grammy nominations and was awarded the 1997 Grammy for Best Traditional Folk Album and the 2008 Grammy for Best Zydeco or Cajun Music Album. BeauSoleil helped put Cajun and Zydeco music on the map globally and continues to tour across the country.

Doucet received a Folk Arts Apprenticeship grant from the National Endowment for the Arts in 1975. He received an NEA National Heritage Fellowship for his work revitalizing French language and Cajun culture, the highest honor in folk arts, as well as a United States Artists Collins Family Foundation Fellowship. In 2011, BeauSoleil was inducted into Louisiana’s Music Hall of Fame.

Chair’s Award for Institutional Support

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

2026 Chair’s Award for Institutional Support

The Rosamary Foundation and the Keller Family Foundation

The RosaMary and Keller Family Foundations have supported LEH for more than 25 years, contributing more than $400,000 collectively. In addition to unrestricted support and support for Prime Time family engagement and reading programs, the Keller Family Foundation contributed to the opening of The Helis Foundation John Scott Center.

The RosaMary Foundation supports organizations within the Greater New Orleans area that contribute to a successful and vibrant city. The foundation was established in 1939 by New Orleans business leader, philanthropist, and civic leader Alfred B. Freeman.

One of the earliest family foundations to operate in the United States, the RosaMary Foundation trustees today are descendants of A. B. and Ella West Freeman, whose daughter, Rosa Freeman Keller along with her husband Charles Keller Jr., founded the Keller Family Foundation. The Kellers were important and dynamic civic activists in New Orleans from the 1940s to the 1990s. The foundation supports organizations that sustain and improve the Greater New Orleans community through education, youth development, human services, and public affairs. The current Board of Trustees represents the third and fourth generations of Keller descendants to serve in that capacity.

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

2026 Champion of Culture Award

Pam Atchison

This year’s Champion of Culture awardee is Pam Atchison.

Pam Atchison served as executive director of the Shreveport Regional Arts Council (SRAC), the area’s largest arts nonprofit, for 38 years. SRAC develops partnerships, produces programming, educates the community, and advocates in the name of art and artists across Northwest Louisiana. Atchison began working at SRAC as an artist-in-residence in the 1980s, a time when SRAC struggled financially. Atchison developed the council into a $3 million-per-year organization, and founded a citywide youth art initiative, ArtBreak. After an arson destroyed the SRAC offices, Atchison worked with the City of Shreveport to designate the historic downtown Central Fire Station as the council’s new offices, inspiring other organizations to inhabit historic buildings along Shreveport’s Texas Street. Atchison retired in December 2024.

Documentary Photographer of the Year

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

2026 Documentary Photographer of the Year

Kevin Rabalais

Dr. Kevin Rabalais, an Avoyelles Parish native and professor of English at Loyola University New Orleans, is the Documentary Photographer of the Year. He has lived and worked all over the world and since returning home to Louisiana has traversed the state tirelessly to document how Louisianans work, play and celebrate. His work helps us see and understand our state in new ways.

Rabalais photography appears regularly in Acadiana Profile, 64 Parishes and Louisiana Life magazines. He is the winner of several Press Club of New Orleans awards, as well as International Regional Magazine Association awards. Rabalais is the author of “The Landscape of Desire,” “Novel Voices: Conversations with 17 Award-Winning American Writers,” “Conversations with James Salter” and “Sacred Trespasses.”

Humanities Book of the Year

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

2026 Humanities Book of the Year

American Populist: Huey Long of Louisiana by Thomas Patterson (published by Louisiana State University Press)

In American Populist: Huey Long of Louisiana, Thomas Patterson reevaluates Huey Long’s life and legacy. Leveraging previously unused primary-source documents, Patterson reframes the present-day caricature of Long, deconstructing existing narratives and introducing new scholarship to the subject of the Kingfish.

Humanities Documentary Film of the Year

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

2026 Humanities Documentary Film of the Year

What We Can Know About Edmond and Basile, produced and directed by Sascha Just

Sascha Just’s What We Can Know About Edmond and Basile documents the artistic legacy and modern rediscovery of two 19th century Creole composers, Edmond Dédé, a free man of color, and Basile Barès, a man born into enslavement. Through archival materials and interviews with contemporary musicians and composers, Just’s film illuminates the previously obscured history of Dédé’s and Barès’ lives and legacy, culminating in contemporary performances of their music.

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

2026 Light Up for Literacy Award

Debra Jo Hailey

La Salle Parish native Dr. Debra Jo Hailey, assistant professor of child and family studies at Northwestern State University, has spent her career developing family literacy festivals and delivering childhood literacy experiences with an emphasis on community buy-in across Louisiana. Her work focuses on interrupting the poverty cycle and teaching parents about the importance of engaging children in conversation about stories, centering literacy on family well-being.

Lifetime Contributions to the Humanities Award

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

2026 Lifetime Contributions to the Humanities Award

Don Marshall

Don Marshall is the retired executive director of the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival and Foundation, leading the organization for 20 years. He has spent his career supporting, uplifting, and leading the arts community of New Orleans. Marshall was the founding director of the New Orleans Contemporary Arts Center (CAC), and co-founder of the Krewe Du Vieux, the Tennessee Williams Festival, and the New Orleans Film and Video Festival. He also served as executive director of the St. Tammany Art Association and of Le Petit Theatre du Vieux Carre.

Museum Exhibition of the Year

Awarded biannually in even-numbered years, the Museum Exhibition of the Year award recognizes an exhibition held during the prior two calendar years (2024 and 2025) that brought new insights to our understanding of the state, its artists, and/or its history.

2026 Museum Exhibition of the Year

 Captive State: Louisiana and the Making of Mass Incarceration, The Historic New Orleans Collection

The Historic New Orleans Collection’s Captive State: Louisiana and the Making of Mass Incarceration (July 19, 2024–February 16, 2025) investigated mass incarceration through a historical lens. Using historical objects, textual interpretation, multimedia content, and data visualization, the exhibit traced the 300-year connection between slavery and mass incarceration.

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