Seeking Stories of Queer California: A Hidden Histories Online ExhibitMain MenuIntroductionGalleriesA guide to each of the online galleries in this digital exhibit, grouped by topic or theme.ArtsAsian & AAPI LGBTQ+ peopleBisexual PeopleBlack LGBTQ+ PeopleCommunitiesDefying ExpectationsGay menHIV/AIDSLatino/a/x LGBTQ+ peopleLesbiansLGBTQ+ ActivismLGBTQ+ DiscriminationLGBTQ+ Life in CaliforniaMarriage and FamiliesPoliticsPrideReligion and SpiritualityTransgender People
Remembrance for Teddy & Arnie, 2008
1media/SHGA_2008_Joey Terril_Remembrance For Teddy Arnie copy_thumb.jpg2024-04-19T12:56:08-07:00Beth McDonald0fdc6d8696ca8ca12c571f0f59d3d5703e5e4ab0449871Artist: Joey Terrill. The image is taken from a 1989 painting created by Terrill titled Remembrance, exhibited at the Santa Monica Museum of Art for an art auction to raise funds for agencies working on the AIDs pandemic in the Latino Community. The serigraph Remembrance (For Teddy and Arnie), printed in 2008, honors the artist's friends, Arnie Araica (who designed the shirt the central figure is wearing) and the artist Teddy Sandoval, who died of Aids. The central figure is a self-portrait standing alongside his past partner, Robert Ward, during a dark period when friends had or were dying of AIDs. The two figures, the younger figure following the steps of his older partner, are in a garden surrounded by plants, white gladiolas, and birds of paradise. The garden, a reflection of life and beauty, can be likened to Terrill's friendships and their loss. The artist reflected on being alive 19 years after creating his original painting, having lived with HIV. Celebrating another 15 years since the creation of this print, the artist continues to champion health rights for the LBGTQ+ community. Part of the exhibit "At the Heart of It: LGBT Representation at Self Help Graphics", curated by Ruben Esparza.plain2024-04-19T12:56:08-07:00Self Help Graphics & ArtArts; HIV/AIDS; Latino/a/x LGBTQ+ peopleFor copyright and usage questions, please contact the holding institution.Joey TerrillBeth McDonald0fdc6d8696ca8ca12c571f0f59d3d5703e5e4ab0
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1media/Bachardy_Morris Kight.jpg2024-04-22T13:55:36-07:00Beth McDonald0fdc6d8696ca8ca12c571f0f59d3d5703e5e4ab0Visual ArtsBeth McDonald8Visual arts are creative expression in pictorial, graphic, sculptural, and other two-dimensional and three-dimensional form. They include painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, photography, and installation art. Different eras in history have had their own standards for defining art and beauty, and queer painters, artists, cartoonists, muralists, and photographers have taken these definitions and remade them in their own image time and time again.gallery2024-04-29T21:31:09-07:00Beth McDonald0fdc6d8696ca8ca12c571f0f59d3d5703e5e4ab0
1media/Five Latinos dressed for the Orange County Gay Pride Festival1991_Vaughn Taylor.jpg2024-04-22T12:54:05-07:00Beth McDonald0fdc6d8696ca8ca12c571f0f59d3d5703e5e4ab0Latino/a/x LGBTQ+ peopleBeth McDonald6gallery2024-04-30T12:49:45-07:00Beth McDonald0fdc6d8696ca8ca12c571f0f59d3d5703e5e4ab0