Margaret Nick Cooke Award for Alaska Native Arts and Languages winner Vicki Soboleff receives her award and a kiss from Lt. Gov. Byron Mallott during the 2016 Governor's Awards for the Arts & Humanities held at the Juneau Arts & Culture Center in Juneau on Jan. 28.

Margaret Nick Cooke Award for Alaska Native Arts and Languages winner Vicki Soboleff receives her award and a kiss from Lt. Gov. Byron Mallott during the 2016 Governor's Awards for the Arts & Humanities held at the Juneau Arts & Culture Center in Juneau on Jan. 28.

Eight Alaskans honored with Governor’s Awards in Juneau

Eight Alaskans were honored with Governor’s Awards for the Arts and Humanities Thursday evening at the Juneau Arts & Culture Center, including three Juneau residents.

Hosted by the Alaska State Council on the Arts and the Alaska Humanities Forum, the awards honor individuals and organizations that “exemplify great art and devotion to the humanities.” Lt. Gov. Byron Mallott distributed the awards, designed by Sitka artist Tommy Joseph.

Governor’s Awards for the Arts went to June Rogers of Fairbanks, who received the Lifetime Achievement Award for more than two decades of work as director of the Fairbanks Arts Association; Pat Garley of Palmer, who received the Individual Artist Award for his bronze sculptures, which include public art pieces in Seward, Kodiak, Palmer, and Anchorage; Nancy DeCherney of Juneau, who received the Arts Advocacy Award for her work as executive director of the Juneau Arts & Humanities Council; and Vicki Soboleff of Juneau, who received the Margaret Nick Cooke Award for Alaska Native Arts and Languages for her work with the youth dance group Lda Kut Naax Sati Yatx’i (All Nations Children), which she founded in1995.

Governor’s Awards for the Humanities went to Cyrano’s Theatre Company of Anchorage, accepted by co-founder Sandy Harper, for its commitment to Alaskan theater; Steve Henrikson of Juneau, curator of collections at the Alaska State Museum, for his work in preserving, researching, developing, and exhibits Alaska’s permanent collection; and Lucy Ahvaiyak Richards of Barrow, for her work in teaching the Iñupiaq language to young children through the North Slope Borough School District.

The Alaska Studies Educator of the Year award went to Marc Swanson of Seward, for his work in developing research-based curriculum and outreach programs that involve direct collaboration with regional scientists and historians in order to connect students to local history.

The evening also included performances by the Alaska Youth Choir, directed by Missouri Smyth, storytelling by Lily Hope of Juneau, dancing by Pulse Dance Company of Anchorage, poetry recitation by Maeva Ordaz of Anchorage and a musical performance by Sophia Street.

Also recognized at the event were the four recipients of the Alaska Literary Awards (Christine Byl of Healy, Alyse Knorr of Anchorage, Kyle Mellen of Fairbanks and Jill Osier of Fairbanks) and the four recipients of the Connie Boochever Artist Fellowship (Ellen Frankenstein of Sitka, John Hagen of Haines, Enzina Marrari of Anchorage and Austin Parkhill of Homer).

See accompanying photos at left, and view a slideshow online at www.juneauempire.com.

Nancy DeCherney receives her Arts Advocacy award from Lt. Gov. Byron Mallott during the 2016 Governor's Awards for the Arts & Humanities held at the Juneau Arts & Culture Center in Juneau on Jan. 28.

Nancy DeCherney receives her Arts Advocacy award from Lt. Gov. Byron Mallott during the 2016 Governor’s Awards for the Arts & Humanities held at the Juneau Arts & Culture Center in Juneau on Jan. 28.

Individual Artist Award winner Patrick Garley speaks during the 2016 Governor's Awards for the Arts & Humanities held at the Juneau Arts & Culture Center in Juneau on Jan. 28.

Individual Artist Award winner Patrick Garley speaks during the 2016 Governor’s Awards for the Arts & Humanities held at the Juneau Arts & Culture Center in Juneau on Jan. 28.

Distinguished Service to the Humanities winner Lucy Ahvaiyak Richards speaks during the 2016 Governor's Awards for the Arts & Humanities held at the Juneau Arts & Culture Center in Juneau on Jan. 28.

Distinguished Service to the Humanities winner Lucy Ahvaiyak Richards speaks during the 2016 Governor’s Awards for the Arts & Humanities held at the Juneau Arts & Culture Center in Juneau on Jan. 28.

Maeva Ordaz, the 2015 National Poetry Out Loud Champion, performs during the 2016 Governor's Awards for the Arts & Humanities held at the Juneau Arts & Culture Center in Juneau on Jan. 28.

Maeva Ordaz, the 2015 National Poetry Out Loud Champion, performs during the 2016 Governor’s Awards for the Arts & Humanities held at the Juneau Arts & Culture Center in Juneau on Jan. 28.

Lifetime Achievement Award for the Arts winner June Rogers of Fairbanks speaks during the 2016 Governor's Awards for the Arts & Humanities held at the Juneau Arts & Culture Center in Juneau on Jan. 28.

Lifetime Achievement Award for the Arts winner June Rogers of Fairbanks speaks during the 2016 Governor’s Awards for the Arts & Humanities held at the Juneau Arts & Culture Center in Juneau on Jan. 28.

More in Neighbors

Sun shines through the canopy in the Tongass National Forest. (Photo by Brian Logan/U.S. Forest Service)
Opinion: Let’s start the New Year with an Alaskan-style wellness movement

Instead of simplified happiness and self-esteem, our Alaskan movement will seize the joy of duty.

January community calendar
Weekly events guide: Juneau community calendar for Jan. 5-11

Visit Juneau Arts and Humanities Council at JAHC.org for more details on this week’s happenings.

Kaa Yahaayí Shkalneegi Muriel Reid photo
In 2024, SSP’s Regional Catalysts attended and helped with the Kake Culture Camp hosted by the Organized Village of Kake. The goal was to be in community, grow our relationships, and identify opportunities to support community priorities determined by the community itself.
In 2024, SSP’s Regional Catalysts attended and helped with the Kake Culture Camp hosted by the Organized Village of Kake. The goal was to be in community, grow our relationships, and identify opportunities to support community priorities determined by the community itself. (Ḵaa Yahaayí Shkalneegi Muriel Reid photo)
Woven Peoples and Place: Don’t be an island, be amongst the people

Láaganaay Tsiits Git’anee and Shaelene Grace Moler reflect on celebrating values in action.

Fred La Plante is the pastor of the Juneau Church of the Nazarene. (Photo courtesy Fred La Plante)
Living and Growing: You are not alone

Those words can pull us back toward hope, especially when we’ve just heard painful news.

The whale sculpture at Overstreet park breaches at sunrise on Friday, Dec. 19, 2025. (Mari Kanagy/Juneau Empire)
Weekly events guide: Juneau community calendar for Dec. 22-28

Visit Juneau Arts and Humanities Council at JAHC.org for more details on this week’s happenings.

Jeff Lund photo 
The author practices in case he had the chance to be Jimmy from the 1986 movie Hoosiers. He never got the chance on the basketball floor, but had moments in life in which he needed to be clutch.
Opinion: Everyone wants to be Jimmy

Sports, and the movie “Hoosiers,” can teach you lessons in life

Laura Rorem (courtesy photo)
Living and Growing: Gracious, gentle power

Gracious power is grace expressed with kindness and mercy.

Hiking down from Dan Moller cabin in mid-January 2025. (photo courtesy John Harley)
Sustainable Alaska: Skiing on the edge

The difference between a great winter for skiing and a bad one can be a matter of a few degrees.

Juneau as pictured from the Downtown Public Library on Thursday, Dec. 19, 2025. (Mari Kanagy/Juneau Empire)
Weekly events guide: Juneau community calendar for Dec. 15-21

Visit Juneau Arts and Humanities Council at JAHC.org for more details on this week’s happenings.

Downtown Juneau experiences its first significant city-level snow fall of the season as pictured on Saturday, Dec. 6, 2025. (Mari Kanagy / Juneau Empire)
Weekend guide for Dec. 12-14

Visit Juneau Arts and Humanities Council at jahc.org for more details on this week’s happenings.

A totem pole, one of 13 on downtown’s Totem Pole Trail in Juneau, Alaska, Nov. 27, 2024. (Christopher S. Miller/The New York Times)
Peggy McKee Barnhill (Courtesy photo)
Gimme a smile: My roommate’s name is Siri

She hasn’t brought a lot of stuff into the house, and she takes up very little space.