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Illinois Humanities to Honor Statewide Leaders at Public Humanities Awards

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Features
by Illinois Humanities

May 19, 2026

Honorees highlight the power of storytelling, culture, and civic connection
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CHICAGO – May 19, 2026 – Illinois Humanities has announced its 2026 Public Humanities Awards honorees, recognizing leaders whose work strengthens communities through storytelling, culture, and civic engagement. The honorees will be celebrated during the annual Public Humanities Awards on September 23, 2026, at Home Court at the Obama Presidential Center in Chicago.

Established in 1984, the Public Humanities Awards gala is Illinois Humanities’ flagship fundraiser supporting free public programs, grants, and educational opportunities across Illinois.

“At a moment when protecting and preserving history, heritage, and culture feels more important than ever, these honorees show us how to do it and ignite our imaginations along the way,” said Gabrielle H. Lyon, Executive Director of Illinois Humanities.

This year’s Public Humanities Award honorees demonstrate how the humanities are lived every day in Illinois communities, through culture, history, journalism, education, and civic engagement. The honorees are Ofelia Guerra, founder of Ballet Folklorico; historian and Illinois Humanities Road Scholar Mike Matejka; and Damon Williams and Daniel Kisslinger, co-founders of Respair Media and AirGo.

In addition to the Public Humanities Awards, Illinois Humanities will present the Beacon Award to nationally recognized folklorist, philanthropist, and former Illinois Humanities board chair, Sue Eleuterio. Established in 2020, the Beacon Award recognizes leaders who have expanded support for the humanities and elevated the role of civic engagement across Illinois. Previous recipients include Jane M. Saks, Tracie D. Hall, the Art for Justice Fund, Dawoud Bey, and Weinberg/Newton Gallery.

Illinois Humanities will also present a special Humanities Hero Award to Mayer Brown in appreciation of the firm’s extraordinary pro bono partnership in 2025. The firm’s counsel and leadership have been instrumental in helping Illinois Humanities navigate an uncertain and ever-evolving federal landscape. The recognition underscores the vital role corporate and pro bono partnerships play in sustaining civic and cultural institutions.

As the United States commemorates its 250th anniversary, Illinois Humanities is expanding efforts to ensure communities across the state are able to uplift the stories, histories, and conversations that help define the nation’s past and shape its future. 

For more information about Illinois Humanities and the 2026 Public Humanities Awards, visit www.ilhumanities.org/pha

Additional sponsorship opportunities are available. For more information about sponsorships, contact Morven Higgins at morven.higgins@ilhumanities.org

More about the 2026 Award Recipients

Sue Eleuterio, Beacon Award Recipient
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Susan Eleuterio is a professional folklorist, educator, and consultant to non-profits. Holding an MA in American Folk Culture/Museum Studies from the Cooperstown Graduate Program (SUNY/Oneonta) and a BA in English/Education from the University of Delaware, Eleuterio serves as an adjunct faculty member of Goucher College’s Master’s in Cultural Leadership and Management program. She teaches courses in Academic Writing; Organizing Communities: Advocacy, Activism and Social Justice, and Fundraising.  She has conducted fieldwork and developed public programs, including exhibits, performances, folk arts education workshops, and residencies in schools, along with professional development programs for teachers, students, adults, and artists for schools, museums, arts education agencies, and arts organizations across the United States. 

She was recently elected to the Board of Directors of the American Folklore Society and is the former Board Chair for Illinois Humanities.  She also served as Co-Chair of the Chicago based Crossroads Fund Board of Directors.  She currently serves as a board member of Lakeshore Public Media in Indiana. 

Her review of the traveling exhibit, Escaramuza, The Poetics of Home, is published in the Journal of American Folklore, Spring 2026 and her review of Whispers in the Echo Chamber: Folklore and the Role of Conspiracy Theory in Contemporary Society, Jesse A. Fivecoate and Andrea Kitta, eds. is available in the current issue of Folklore and Education.

https://jfepublications.org/journal/vol-12/.

Eleuterio is the author of Irish American Material Culture: A Directory of Collections, Sites and Festivals in the United States and Canada, as well as essays in the Encyclopedia of Chicago History, the Encyclopedia of American Folklore, the Encyclopedia of Women’s Folklore and Folklife, Ethnic American Food Today: A Cultural Encyclopedia, "Statewide Models for Folk Arts in Education" in the Missouri Folklore Society Journal,  and a collaboratively written chapter"Even Presidents Need Comfort Food; Tradition, Food and Politics at the Valois Cafeteria" in Comfort Food, Meanings and Memories (2017 University Press of Mississippi ).  Her chapter, "Pussy Hats: Common Ground at the Chicago Women's March was published in 2020 in Pussy Hats, Politics and Public Protest (University Press of Mississippi). 

In 2024, she co-created a strategic plan with Sherry Williams, ED of Bronzeville Historical Society, for the Lyles Station Historic Corporation in Indiana. She also served as a consultant in exhibit development, public programming, and K-12 curriculum for the Center for Folklore Studies at the Ohio State University’s Placemaking in Scioto County project. She currently serves as the Board Treasurer for Southern Ohio Folklife and as Board Treasurer for KINDFOLK, a non-profit serving Indiana and Kentucky.  Projects for Southern Ohio Folklife include providing professional development for teachers in integrating student culture into the classroom. She has served as co-chair of the American Folklore Society’s (AFS) Media and Public Outreach Committee and is currently the co-convenor of the American Folklore Society’s Women’s Section. She co-authored the AFS Advocacy toolkit, which provides case studies and guidance for advocacy by folklorists, academics, and community members.

Mayer Brown, Humanities Hero Award
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Mayer Brown is a leading international law firm with offices across the globe, known for its integrated approach to complex legal and business challenges. Mayer Brown's Chicago office is the original and largest office of the firm. It is also one of the largest law offices in Chicago, with deep roots in the community and a prominent place in the city’s history.

Founded in 1881, its lawyers have played a central role in Chicago’s growth and governance, earning national recognition for excellence in corporate, finance, and litigation work. The office is equally distinguished by a long history of public service, civic leadership, and pro bono advocacy, reflecting a deep and enduring commitment to Chicago and its communities.

Ofelia Guerra, Public Humanities Awards Recipient
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Ofelia Guerra is the Founder and Executive Director of Ballet Folklorico de Chicago. She established the organization to create a space where her daughters and others in the community could celebrate and connect with their cultural roots and traditions.

Under Ofelia’s leadership, Ballet Folklorico de Chicago has grown into an organization serving approximately 400 students by providing affordable, high-quality artistic instruction rooted in the Indigenous, African, and European influences that shape Mexican folkloric dance. Each year, BFC creates meaningful leadership opportunities for youth and has awarded 21 college scholarships to date. Through the arts and humanities, Ofelia is committed to uplifting the community and inspiring future generations to embrace their heritage with pride.

 

  

Mike Matejka, Public Humanities Award Recipient
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Mike Matejka has spent decades as a community leader in Bloomington-Normal and is widely recognized for his contributions to public life. A former Bloomington City Council member, he continues to advocate for social justice, labor rights, and inclusive public policy. Both of his parents believed that inequality and the underrepresentation of workers in meetings with managers are crucial factors in underpaying and mistreating all workers, a perspective that deeply shaped his worldview. His work reflects an ongoing commitment to civic engagement and empowering communities to create meaningful, lasting social change.

 

  

Damon Williams and Daniel Kisslinger, Public Humanities Award Recipients
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Damon A. Williams is a movement builder, organizer, hip-hop performing artist, educator, and media maker from the south side of Chicago. He is the Co-Founder of Respair Production & Media, and the Co-Creator of AirGo, a weekly podcast in Chicago that reshapes culture for the more liberatory and creative. He is also the co-founder of the #LetUsBreathe Collective, an artistic activist organization with the mission of utilizing cultural production and popular education to redistribute power and resources, eradicate systemic violence, and transform inequity. 

Daniel Kisslinger is a Chicago-based host and producer who creates dialogue-based media showcasing the stories, voices, and artworks of communities challenging power, reconfiguring public life, and reimagining our world. He is the Co-Founder of Respair Production & Media, a movement journalism and media hub, and is the Co-Creator of AirGo, a weekly podcast in Chicago that reshapes culture for the more liberatory and creative.

 

About the Public Humanities Awards Ceremony

Established in 1984, Illinois Humanities' Public Humanities Awards Ceremony celebrates people who have made an indelible impact on our state through their work in and support of the humanities, honoring them with the Public Humanities Award. This event is Illinois Humanities’ most important annual fundraiser and enables us to provide grants and free public humanities programs throughout Illinois.

Launched in 2020 as part of the Public Humanities Awards Ceremony, the Beacon Award honors an individual who or an organization that has been a champion for – or investor in – the humanities in Illinois, elevating the work of humanists in ways that have improved the quality of the state for its residents.

Learn more