Antony Hegarty presents The Lost Films of Charles Ludlam at a special edition of Queer|Art|Film.Ģ011 - PRACTICE: Queer|Art introduces Queer|Art|Mentorship, an annual creative and professional development program that brings together emerging and established artists in a 13-month exchange. Curated by Ira Sachs and Adam Baran, presented at 92st-Y Tribeca.Ģ010 - Queer|Art|Film moves to the IFC Center.Ģ010 - PRESENTS: Queer|Art restores The Sorrows of Dolores and Museum of Wax by Charles Ludlam.
This new initiative of grants, prizes, and awards will provide various kinds of direct support-monetary and otherwise-to LGBTQ+ artists.Ģ009 - PRESENTS: Queer|Art introduces Queer|Art|Film, a critically-acclaimed monthly screening series in which LGBTQ artists present and discuss the films that have most inspired them. This includes showcase presentations of work by artists in our Mentorship community and stand-alone public programming series that feature artists from our extended community.ĪWARDS is the final major area of support being developed to honor Queer|Art's mission.
Under PRESENTS, we focus on public presentations organized in partnership with various co-presenting venues. The annual 13-month program cultivates an intergenerational and interdisciplinary network of support and shared knowledge among a diverse and vibrant community of LGBTQ filmmakers, authors, performers, curators, and visual artists. Queer|Art|Mentorship is the core program of PRACTICE and the cornerstone of all activity at Queer|Art. Each of these areas of support operate across four fields of creative practice: Film, Performance, Visual Art, and Literature. Our programs are organized under three major areas of support - PRACTICE (Creative and Professional Development), PRESENTS (Events, Exhibitions, and other Public Presentations), and AWARDS (Residencies, Grants, and Prizes). By fostering the confident expression of LGBTQ+ artists’ perspectives, stories, and identities, Queer|Art amplifies the voice of a population that has been historically suppressed, disenfranchised, and often overlooked by traditional institutional and economic support systems. QUEER|ART was launched in 2009 to support a generation of LGBTQ+ artists that lost mentors to the AIDS Crisis of the 1980s.