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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 7, 2013

  

CONTACT

Gerard Koskovich

[email protected]

 

 

New Exhibition at GLBT History Museum Highlights
Queer Lives, Queer Archives From Around the World 

  

San Francisco -- A new exhibition opening on February 1 in the Front Gallery at The GLBT History Museum will draw on innovative curatorial work combining art and history to offer a glimpse into the ways queer lives from the past are honored in archives in nearly a dozen countries. Conceived by E. G. Crichton, the museum's artist-in-residence, "Migrating Archives: LGBT Delegates From Collections Around the World" will present materials from archives that contributed photographs of artifacts and documents from their holdings to portray the experiences of one or two individuals.

  

"The archives from countries far and wide are sending representations of their chosen collections as delegates to San Francisco," says Crichton. "The images will be brought together in large graphic wall panels and associated videos to create portraits of both the organizations taking part and the historical lives they have chosen to represent them.

"
It's as though the people who will be portrayed are themselves virtual delegates to our city and our time," Crichton adds. "Some of the individuals included are famous, and others are ordinary people whose artifacts were found or donated after they died. One or two remain anonymous, reflecting the fate of so many LGBT people whose names have disappeared from history."

  

Organizations and collections participating in the "Migrating Archives" exhibition include
Adarna, Manila, The Philippines; Australian Lesbian and Gay Archives, Melbourne, Australia; Cassero Gay and Lesbian Center, Bologna, Italy; Fonds Suzan Daniel, Ghent, Belgium; Gay and Lesbian Memory in Action (GALA), Johannesburg, South Africa; Glasgow Women's Library, Glasgow, Scotland; Hall-Carpenter Archives, Londonthe James Branch Cabell Library, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia; Labrisz, Budapest, Hungary; National Archives, London; and Rukus, London.

  

"My idea is to put materials that are precious to each collection into motion as they become guests and hosts, sometimes crossing national borders more easily than individuals can," notes Crichton. "For people whose traces are so often erased even by our biological families, omitted from official histories, or just lost, archives are a way of creating our own lineage. 'Migrating Archives' is designed to both demonstrate and inspire this vital process of historical self-creation."

  

"Migrating Archives" opens on Friday, Feb. 1, 2013, with a public reception from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. at The GLBT History Museum, 4127 18th St., San Francisco. The exhibition runs through May 2013.  

 

The museum is open Monday and Wednesday through Saturday 11:00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m.; Sunday, noon - 5:00 p.m.; closed Tuesday. Admission is $5.00 (regular); $3.00 (California students with ID); free for members. For more information, visit www.glbthistorymuseum.org.  

 

ABOUT THE GLBT HISTORY MUSEUM   

  

Open since January 2011, The GLBT History Museum in San Francisco's Castro District is the first full-scale, stand-alone museum of its kind in the United States. Currently featured in the Main Gallery is a long-term exhibition: "Our Vast Queer Past: Celebrating San Francisco's GLBT History." The Front Gallery and Corner Gallery spaces present changing exhibitions.    

 

The museum is a project of the GLBT Historical Society, a research center and archives that collects, preserves and interprets the history of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people and the communities that support them. Founded in 1985, the society maintains one of the world's largest collections of GLBT historical materials. For more information, visit www.glbthistory.org.  

 

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION PARTICIPANTS  

 

Following are the exhibition participants confirmed as of late December. Further participants likely will be added before the opening: 

 

Australia

 

Australian Lesbian and Gay Archives (Melbourne)

http://alga.org.au/

 

Belgium

Fonds Suzan Daniel -- Belgian LGBT Archives and Documentation Center (Ghent)

www.fondssuzandaniel.be/

 

England

 

Hall-Carpenter Archives (London)  

www2.lse.ac.uk/library/archive/holdings/lesbian_and_gay_archives.aspx  

 

The National Archives (London)

www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/

  

Rukus (London)

Hungary  

Labrisz (Budapest)

www.labrisz.hu/

 

Italy

Cassero Gay and Lesbian Center (Bologna)

www.cassero.it/

 

The Philippines  

Adarna (Manila)

www.facebook.com/pages/Adarna-Food-and-Culture-Restaurant/42990250925

 

Scotland

Glasgow Women's Library (Glasgow)

http://womenslibrary.org.uk/  

  

South Africa  

Gay and Lesbian Memory in Action -- GALA (Johannesburg)

www.gala.co.za/

 

United States

Special Collections and Archives, James Branch Cabell Library,  

Virginia Commonwealth University (Richmond, Va.)

www.library.vcu.edu/jbc/speccoll/

 

 

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EDITOR'S NOTE: Following are three of the photographs that will be displayed in "Migrating Archives." All may be reproduced free of charge in media coverage of the exhibition, provided the  credits given in the captions are included.

 

Two young people standing in a garden.
South African activist Bev Ditsie (left) on her 16th birthday. Photo: Courtesy Gay and Lesbian Memory in Action (Johannesburg, South Africa). 
Protestor dressed as the Statue of Liberty.
Demonstration in Milan, Italy, against the U.S. Supreme Court decision that upheld the constitutionality of a Georgia sodomy law (July,1, 1986). Antonio Frainer is the nun on the right
Photo: Courtesy Felix Co; Cassero Gay and Lesbian Center (Bologna, Italy).

Woman wearing a man's suit and high heels.
Suzanne De Pues, born in 1918, gradually became aware of her feelings for women. In the 1930s, she discovered gay and lesbian nightlife in Brussels and adopted the pseudonym she would use henceforth: Suzan Daniel. At the same time she was active as Belgium's youngest and first female film critic. Photo: Courtesy Fonds Suzan Daniel (Ghent, Belgium).

 

 

The following photograph of curator E. G. Crichton may be reproduced free of charge; credit: GLBT Historical Society (San Francisco). 

Head shot of E. G. Crichton
E. G. Crichton, curator of "Migrating Archives" and artist-in-residence
at The GLBT History Museum, San Francisco.

For a selection of high-resolution photographs of The GLBT History Museum, along with captions and credit information, see the following DropBox folder. The photos may be reproduced free of charge in media reports.

 

Visitors to The GLBT History Museum

https://www.dropbox.com/sh/qzdkfuecozs5j2v/YYK3ja7AAQ