To mark the one-year anniversary of the 1 January 2025 terrorist assault within the widespread French Quarter district of New Orleans, a short lived public artwork set up has gone on view above Bourbon Avenue, reworking the world into an area for reflection and remembrance. Referred to as Second Line within the Sky, the set up options lights and greater than 800 prayer flags, welcoming locals and guests to hitch in mourning and therapeutic.
The assault on 1 January killed 15 folks and left the town of New Orleans grieving. With the upcoming vacation season and anniversary of this occasion, the native restaurateur Katy Casbarian conceived of Second Line within the Sky,impressed by gentle shows she had seen in Regent Avenue in London.
“I’ve longed for a lighted vacation show within the French Quarter,” she says. “Earlier this summer time I had the thought to tie in a memorial for the victims of the terrorist assault with a lighted vacation show. The lights are the draw to get folks to the memorial to recollect and replicate.”
Second Line within the Sky put in above Bourbon Avenue in New Orleans’s French Quarter Picture by David Nola
Suspended above Bourbon Avenue by 18 January 2026, Second Line within the Sky got here along with Casbarian as lead collaborator together with the architect and design agency Studio West, led by Jennie West.
“For the reason that assault, we had been at all times fascinated by what we may do to try to carry the neighborhood collectively once more. The town hadn’t actually come collectively since, which is comprehensible; the neighborhood’s belief was threatened,” West says. “When Katy got here to us within the spring with such a transparent imaginative and prescient, there wasn’t something to query or think about—we each wished to create one thing particular and uniquely New Orleans in order that we may seize a second for the collective to honour, replicate, and have a good time the various lives that had been impacted.”
The group commissioned Babette Beaullieu, Margaret Crosby and Jan Gilbert, artists with ties to the town, to create the cover of vibrant flags. Every distinctive flag options imagery consultant of New Orleans, together with motifs alluding to the town’s wealthy musical historical past because the birthplace of jazz. Illuminated trumpets additional this connection, and handkerchief and umbrella motifs nod to the second line custom. Additionally referenced within the venture’s title, the time period refers back to the crowds that observe parade bands, waving handkerchiefs and umbrellas as a celebration of each life and dying.
Sewn into the flags are notes from survivors and the victims’ households, in addition to pictures by native artists Judy Cooper and Jamell Tate. The colors of the flags—deep pinks, reds and purples—had been chosen particularly to invoke therapeutic and resilience.

Second Line within the Sky put in above Bourbon Avenue in New Orleans’s French Quarter Picture by David Nola
“I’ve at all times felt that by artwork, therapeutic can occur,” says Beaullieu. “New Orleans was so in want of therapeutic and I wished to assist present everybody that we’re a neighborhood of energy in a constructive, loving and caring means—and that we’re resilient. Once I make one thing, I would like it to be lovely, and I hope others can really feel that too—discovering their very own model of magnificence and seeing how hatred will be changed with love.”
By including illuminated components, the group ensured the set up will be loved in the course of the day and at evening, as Bourbon Avenue is on the centre of New Orleans’s nightlife scene, too.
“I hope that residents and guests alike can really feel—or at the least see—what it’s like to come back collectively in hardship,” says West. “There was a lot magnificence, therapeutic, and volunteership that has captured the really particular and distinctive spirit of camaraderie all through everything of this course of, and I hope others had been in a position to be reminded of the infectious power of neighborhood that’s so distinctive to New Orleans.”








