Contents:
- KEH WILEY BE THE FIRST BLACK, GAY ARTIST TO PAT A US PRINT’S OFFICIAL PORTRA
- 50 CENT COMPAR JAY-Z TO ‘GAY PATER’ BASQUA AFTER JIGGA CALLS EMEM ‘THAT WHE GUY’
KEH WILEY BE THE FIRST BLACK, GAY ARTIST TO PAT A US PRINT’S OFFICIAL PORTRA
Mart told ESSENCE that part of how she began drawg was to pe the homophobia her environment. While we were still reverg om him snatchg our edg at the Brooklyn Mm 2015, Wiley beme the first Black openly gay artist to pat a printial portra wh his regal portrayal of Print Obama 2018.
The gture also speaks to the hont transparency wh which Chase pats the terr worlds of black gay men that have mostly been kept off the nvas and behd closed doors.
50 CENT COMPAR JAY-Z TO ‘GAY PATER’ BASQUA AFTER JIGGA CALLS EMEM ‘THAT WHE GUY’
“The are a large part jt om my memory, gog and travelg, tra mutg, havg lovers, iends, beg loud and gay on the tra—takg up too much space, ” he explas, potg to those he has already is one of the most -mand emergg young paters the untry. It's a llapsg of space that allows for black gay men to see what they have rarely been afford: a way of standg securely the prent while seeg both the fort of a rich history and the promise of a lucent future. In works such as 2 tra bois (2019), a patg of two gay mal wh purple fas mergg to one agast a gold sky, he appli their formal lsons and expands on them wh great re and nsiratn for his muny.
He adds what he lls a “high sexual energy” that brgs to the fore a fleetg sense of black gay sire and a lived experience that's entirely his own.
Patgs such as 3 grac of Olney (2018), where the figur are entangled both physilly and sexually, allu to how Chase se his reer as a way to create space for rensirg what black male sexualy and masculy might mean om the perspective of a black gay man. There is no shame or rpectabily on the nvas, only black gay men livg msy liv, which they are fightg to love one another, agast odds, spe 's work fs to a few-s-long bate Amerin art that was brought to the mm by the celebrated curator and director of the Stud Mm Harlem, Thelma Goln. ” The exhibn clud black gay artists such as Glenn Ligon, Lyle Ashton Harris, and Fred Wilson, who all created works that challenged popular racist and homophobic reprentatns of both gay and straight black men.