'I Want a President' by Zoe Leonard at the High Line in New York. Courtesy of the High Line Art
"What scares me in politics, in public life, in 'leadership,' as it is presented to us is that it is all one face, grim and determined, it never changes, " Myles later wrote to her supporters that November. In contrast, she offered up a "moody campaign."As a gay artist with no assets or health insurance at the time, Myles was basically the opposite of that face. She was also the inspiration for the poem that's going to be blown up to 20-by-30 feet and displayed on the High Line––forcing tourists and New Yorkers alike to consider lines like "I want a dyke for president"––from October 11 through November 17.
The poem, "I Want a President," written by Myles's friend, the artist Zoe Leonard, was originally meant to be published on the back of a queer magazine that went under. Instead, Xeroxed copies were passed along to friends, who put them on their refrigerator doors, and then later replaced them with postcards after the art journal LTTR printed some in 2006. There was another resurgence in the work's popularity when, during Sweden's 2010 election, a group of artists held a collective reading; other groups have since used it for writing workshops, allowing people to reinterpret the text as they saw fit. Given the way that the piece spread organically, it's something like a pre-internet meme––something shared, copied, and re-interpreted starting way before most Americans had internet connections at home."In Zoe's own words, the stakes are too high this year to fuck around."
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