Video (1:19): a promotional video by artists Allyson Mitchell and Deirdre Logue about Gender Euphoria: Killjoy’s Kastle Unplugged Performances on November 2, 2024.
Category: Midwestern United States
Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, and Wisconsin.
Video (1:27:43): artist talk. American queer feminist artist Liz Collins is well-known for pushing the boundaries of art and design
Video (2:41): a studio visit with openly queer Chicago artist, Angela Davis Fegan.
Video (7:40): ‘The Importance of Queer Art’, mini documentary (2024) by Emma McName about printmaker Emily Cooper, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Video (18:16): Art21 proudly presents an artist segment: Photographer Catherine Opie visits her childhood hometown of Sandusky, Ohio, for a series of photos of Lake Erie.
Video (4:41): Nicole Eisenman and MCA associate curator Jadine Collingwood talk about artistic evolution, allegorical imagery, and humor as a survival mechanism.
Zanele Muholi: Eye Me at San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, 18 January – 11 August, 2024.
Video (1:14:58): Madeleine Grynsztejn in conversation with American art historian, author and former curator Helen Molesworth.
Video (3:31): Kristin Spangenberg talks about a new acquisition by the Cincinnati Art Museum: Four Bathers, a print by Maud Hunt Squire. And she tells about lesbian artist duo and partners in life Maud Hunt Squire (1873–1954) and Ethel Mars (1876-1959).
Video (35:23): Artist talk by Sarah Zapata about her queer art exhibition ‘Sarah Zapata: In So the roots be known’, August 18, 2023 – July 24, 2024 at Kemper Museum. USA.
Video (55:19): LJ Roberts, the spring 2023 Arthur and Sheila Prensky Island Press Visiting Artist, is an artist and writer working in Brooklyn, New York and Pioneertown, California. LG Roberts is unapologetically queer.
Video (2:17): queer artist and photographer Diana Solís (US) talks about her photography book Luz: Seeing the Space Between Us, (November, 2022).
Video (27:31): Speaking Freely: Holly Hughes (2000). Performance artist and member of the NEA Four, Holly Hughes talks about how the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) took away her funding in the 1990s for the reason of her sexuality, and her decade-long battle to overturn a Congress-made law.
Video (1:01:28) Brought to you by the University of Michigan School of Art & Design. Wednesday, February 15, 2006: student performance and presentation by American lesbian performance artist and teacher Holly Hughes.