Queer Spaces: London, 1980s – Today, April 2 – August 25, 2019 at Gallery 4, Whitechapel Gallery, London. And Hannah Quinlan and Rosie Hasting performance/party at the ArtNight festival in London, Walthamstow Market June 22, 2019, 7pm-12am.
Video (10:20): We visit NYC based photographer Gail Thacker at the Gene Frankle Theatre about her prolific career behind the camera and cultivating LGBTQ culture throughout 40 years. And she shows us her latest book.
Video (approx. 1:25:00): New York–based artist Zoe Leonard discuss her expansive practice that brings together photography and sculpture to explore themes of loss, migration, gender, and sexuality in the urban landscape at the Wexner Center for the Arts (2019).
Nobody Promised You Tomorrow: Art 50 Years After Stonewall, May 3 – December 8, 2019. Brooklyn Museum, Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art, 4th Floor, New York, USA. The exhibition presents works by emerging artists based in Brooklyn and New York.
Zoe Williams: Sunday Fantasy. Dates: May 25 – July 27, 2019. Venue: Mimosa House, London, UK. Opening: May 24, 2019
‘Art After Stonewall: 1969-1989’ is a two-part exhibition runing in New York until July 20, 2019. It is accompanied by a fully-illustrated 300-page catalogue (published by Rizzoli Electa) with essays by more than 20 established and emerging scholars and artists.
Queer feminist artist is Roxana Halls’ paintings are on display in the lower level gallery space. The gallery invites you to celebrate Birmingham Pride weekend with them where they will be serving champagne on Saturday and Sunday May 25-26 between 12-16.00 in the gallery.
South African visual activist Zanele Muholi talks about her 2017 exhibition Zanele Muholi: Somnyama Ngonyama, Hail the Dark Lioness which was turned into a monograph last year.
Over 140 LGBTQ cartoonists, scholars, publishers, and librarians will participate on panel discussions in this amazing conference.
Michelle Handelman: LOVER HATER CUNTY INTELLECTUAL, April 18 – May 26, 2019 at Signs and Symbols, 102 Forsyth Street, New York, NY 10002, USA. OPENING: April 18, 6-8 PM
Video (7:37): TateShots’ video Agnes Martin – ‘Beauty is in Your Mind’ (2015) with video clips of Canadian-born American abstract painter Agnes Martin (1912-2004) in her studio in 1997.
This one-day international conference [organised by Cuntemporary.org] brings together artists, theorists and activists to cover topics ranging from non-human ethics to ecosexuality.
Caitlin Rose Sweet – Hag
March 29 – May 18, 2019
Empirical Nonsense, 87 Rivington Street, New York 10002, USA
March 23 – July 28, 2019 at MMCA, Seoul, Korea.
Finnish avant-garde filmmaker Mox Mäkelä’s film Strange (Vieras) premieres on May 15, 2019 at 18.30–21.00, Tate Modern, London, UK.
Video (36:05): A lively discussion with Barbara Hammer, an icon of queer cinema, on her relationship to the TEDDY AWARD, living with cancer and her new film ‘”EVIDENTIARY BODIES”.
Mimosa House is an independent, non-profit gallery space in the heart of Mayfair curated by Daria Khan. Dedicated to artistic experimentation and collaboration, they support dialogue between intergenerational women and queer artists.
The Fourth edition of the Kochi-Muziris Biennale runs until March 29, 2019 in South India.
Barbara Hammer died earlier this month (March 16, 2019). She was an amazing pioneer filmmaker and a mentor of generation of younger queer filmmakers. June 1 – August 11, 2019, the Wexner Center for the Arts at The Ohio State University debuts the exhibition, Barbara Hammer: In This Body.
Harmony Hammond: Materia, Witness, Five Decades of Art, March 3 to September 15, 2019 at The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, Ridgefield, Connecticut, USA.