"Queer Art" beme a powerful polil and celebratory term to scribe the art and experience of gay, lbian+ people.
Contents:
- THE MAKG OF GEE SEGAL’S GAY LIBERATN
- ON THE ENDURG LEGACY OF “GAY LIBERATN,” A SCULPTURE BY GEE SEGAL (BA ’49)
- GAY LIBERATN MONUMENT
- TEN QUEER REIMAGGS OF NEW YORK'S 'GAY LIBERATN MONUMENT'
- GAY LIBERATN SCULPTURE
THE MAKG OF GEE SEGAL’S GAY LIBERATN
The sculpture, Gay Liberatn, was created by Gee Segal (BA ’49), who earned a gree art tn om NYU’s School of Edutn. * gay liberation sculpture *
Tled Gay Liberatn, the piece had taken twelve years to fd s tend home wh the triangle of Christopher Park Greenwich Village, jt across Christopher Street om what had been the Stonewall Inn.
ON THE ENDURG LEGACY OF “GAY LIBERATN,” A SCULPTURE BY GEE SEGAL (BA ’49)
Cast whe bronze, the standg gay male uple and their lbian unterparts, who were seated on two park bench clud the posn, managed to ffle feathers of every stripe. Prottg gays thought wrong bee only whe mols their early thirti had been employed, and the whe (albe Jewish) artist was straight (though the mols were all openly gay).
GAY LIBERATN MONUMENT
Many non-gay crics didn’t want a public space to be occupied by a sculpture that allud to homosexualy, much ls a pictn of same-sex upl, while fully clothed, actually touchg one another.
TEN QUEER REIMAGGS OF NEW YORK'S 'GAY LIBERATN MONUMENT'
For those tractors, was bad enough that actual homosexuals roamed the Wt Village streets. Dpe all the brouhaha, Gay Liberatn was eventually stalled as a permanent monument Christopher Park, wh a send stg set on the grounds of Stanford Universy Palo Alto, California.
The sculpture has been nounced by some art historians and culture mavens as borg and “angly somber, ” and maligned by gay activists as too nservative a pictn of homosexual affectn. Forty years after the Stonewall Rts of June 1969, Gay Liberatn memorat more than the rts themselv. For many olr gay men and lbians, reprents their emergence om an earlier era when would have been impossible for two men or two women to engage the behavr the statu pict, however unrstated, even Greenwich Village.
GAY LIBERATN SCULPTURE
For today’s gay and lbian young people, who may not be fully aware of the long history of our stggle for equaly and acceptance, ’s a public emblem of acknowledgement that we exist and belong.