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Queer Exhibit & Re-Opening Launch Party at GLBT History Museum | Castro

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Thursday, May 15, 2014 - 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm | Cost: FREE
GLBT Historical Society Museum | 4127 18th St. San Francisco, CA

Event Details

The first show in the newly remodeled GLBT History Museum, “Queer Past Becomes Present,” is holding its grand opening on May 15, 2014.

The GLBT History Museum is the first full-scale, stand-alone museum of its kind in the United States.

Exhibition topics include:

Queer Youth: Out and Active
“Queer Youth” traces the activism of San Francisco Bay Area LGBTQQ youth 25 and under from the 1970s to the present.

The Lesbians of The Ladder: Courage Under Attack
In 1955, a small group — many of them women of color – courageously founded the Daughters of Bilitis, a social club for lesbians. The organization’s publication, the Ladder, quickly became a lifeline for women across the country struggling to come out in a virulently homophobic society.

The Assassination of Supervisor Harvey Milk
This section looks at one of the most horrific events in queer history, the assassination of activist and San Francisco Supervisor Harvey Milk, and includes related artifacts, photographs and an excerpt from Milk’s political will.

José Sarria: Activist and Entertainer
Costumes, artifacts, and ephemera document the life of José Sarria, “The Nightingale of Montgomery Street,” from his days waiting tables and performing at the Black Cat Café through his historic run as the first openly gay candidate for public office in the United States.

Constructing Jiro Onuma: Putting the Pieces Together
“Constructing Jiro Onuma” details how history is a dynamic process involving continuous excavation and discovery through the personal collection of Japanese immigrant Jiro Onuma. His collection offers the only known visual documentation of same-sex intimacy in the Japanese American incarceration camps.

Fighting for Our Lives: Four Organizations Respond to AIDS
A look at four pioneering Bay Area organizations that fought for a greater response to the HIV/AIDS pandemic: People with AIDS-SF, the ARC/AIDS Vigil, the National Task Force for AIDS Prevention and WORLD (Women Organized in Response to Life-threatening Diseases).

Gayborhoods: Lost Queer Landscapes
Using unique artifacts and images, this exhibit recaptures the clubs, bars, restaurants, and other venues of three vibrant queer communities – North Beach, the Tenderloin, and the Valencia Street corridor – now all merely memories.

History is Now: The Dragon Fruit Project
“History is Now” showcases an intergenerational historical preservation project within the queer Asian Pacific Islander community.

Disclaimer: Please double check event information with the event organizer as events can be canceled, details can change after they are added to our calendar, and errors do occur.


Cost: FREE
Categories: *Top Pick*, Art & Museums, Free Museum Day, San Francisco
Address: 4127 18th St. San Francisco, CA