Emily Colucci
How the World's First LGBTQ Art Museum Built a Collection That Spans Centuries
With the reopening of an expanded Leslie-Lohman Museum of Gay and Lesbian Art today, the museum's director discusses what it means to bring one of the world's most significant queer art collections together under one roof.
Who Says Drag Can't Be Fine Art?
From Marcel Duchamp to today's hot young drag performers out of Brooklyn, drag and fine art have a long, twisted history.
Inside 'Party Out Of Bounds,' an Art Exhibition Exploring Nightlife as a Form of Activism
A look back at the history of LBGTQ clubbing from disco to AIDS—through the lens of visual art.
Disco Apocalypse: Charles Atlas Films the End Times
"The world should end and then there should be a disco song," says video artist Charles Atlas.
Resurrecting the Gay History of the Holocaust
Pacifico Silano's "Against Nature" explores an often overlooked and frequently overlooked period of LGBT history: the persecution of gay men by the Nazis.
Can Art Be a Form of Political Activism?
Does art have the power to generate social and political change? It's a question that's been discussed endlessly over the centuries, but it seems especially timely in the past few months.
Douglas Bourgeois on His Trippy, Musician-Filled Paintings
I asked him about his life in southern Louisiana and why he decided to paint Lana Del Rey and Bobby Womack singing together on the moon.
A New Orleans Gallery Show That's Transformed Guns into Art
The weapons have gone from a police evidence room to gallery walls.
The Plantation Is Still Here: An Interview with Artist M. Lamar
We talked about sexuality, racism, history, the policing of black men's bodies.
Double Trouble: Brice Dellsperger on His Subversive 'Body Double' Series
Brice Dellsperger’s extensive series uses cinema as found material, which can be manipulated, perverted, and subverted. We talked to the French video artist about his provocative use of camp and drag.
Aloha, Business Casual: Nicole Reber's Hawaiian Shirt Exhibition At AMO Studios
We talked to Nicole Reber about her new exhibition of politically charged Hawaiian shirts.
Remembering New York’s Downtown Documentarian Nelson Sullivan
Twenty-five years ago this month, on July 4, 1989, video artist Nelson Sullivan suddenly died of a heart attack, leaving behind almost 1,200 hours of footage of the now iconic and heavily romanticized Downtown New York scene.