Apr
21
7:00 PM19:00

Doris Fish: Ego as Artform | Opening Reception

LOCATION

GLBT Historical Society Museum, 4127 18th St., San Francisco, CA 94114

ADMISSION

$10.00 | Free for members

RSVP and purchase tickets here

This event celebrates the launch of a new exhibition, “Doris Fish: Ego as Artform.” The program will include remarks from curator Ms. Bob Davis and light refreshments.  This exhibition will include pieces from Fish’s personal and professional life, and showcase the power of drag to change the world.

Doris Fish was an Australian-born drag performer, actor, writer and artist who split his time between Sydney, Australia and San Francisco, California. He co-wrote and starred in the cult classic film “Vegas in Space,” performed with the drag group Sluts-A-Go-Go, protested the exclusion of drag performers from Pride parades, and increased national visibility of drag by appearing on a wide-selling greeting-card series and a number of talk shows. Fish became one of the most prominent and beloved drag queens in 1980s San Francisco until his death from AIDS complications in 1991.

The exhibition coincides with the release of a new book by Craig Seligman, Who Does That Bitch Think She Is?: Doris Fish and the Rise of Drag. Seligman and Davis will be hosting a book talk on Friday, April 28. For tickets and more information, click here.

This exhibition opens Friday, April 21 and will remain on display through fall 2023.

About Ms. Bob Davis

Ms. Bob Davis (she/her/hers) is the founder and director of the Louise Lawrence Transgender Archive. In the 1990s she served two terms on the GLBT Historical Society Board of Directors.

Location

GLBT Historical Society Museum, 4127 18th St., San Francisco, CA 94114

Admission

Admission is free for members and $10 for non-members. This event will likely sell out, so guests are encouraged to reserve their tickets early. Tickets are available here.

Join the GLBT Historical Society

Become a member of the GLBT Historical Society for free museum and program admission, discounts in the museum shop and other perks throughout the year.

Exhibition logo created by Robyn Adams.

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Apr
28
6:00 PM18:00

Who Does That Bitch Think She Is?: Craig Seligman & Ms. Bob Davis in Conversation on Doris Fish and the Rise of Drag.

LOCATION

GLBT Historical Society Museum, 4127 18th St., San Francisco, CA 94114

ADMISSION

$5.00 | Free for members

RSVP and purchase tickets here

In WHO DOES THAT BITCH THINK SHE IS: Doris Fish and the Rise of Drag, author Craig Seligman dives into the short but abundant life of Doris Fish (born Philip Mills in 1952). There were effectively three Dorises—the quiet visual artist, the glorious drag queen, and the hunky male sex worker who supported the other two. He started performing in Sydney in 1972 as a member of Sylvia and the Synthetics, a psycho troupe that represented the first anarchic flowering of queer creative energy in the post-Stonewall era. After moving to San Francisco in the mid-’70s, he became the driving force behind years of sidesplitting drag shows that were loved as much as you can love throwaway trash—which is what everybody thought they were. No one, Doris included, perceived them as political theater, when in fact they were accomplishing satire’s deepest dream: not just to rail against society, but to change it. Seligman recounts a dynamic period in queer history — from Stonewall to AIDS — giving insight into how our ideas about gender have broadened to make drag the phenomenon we know it as today.

In conversation with Ms. Bob Davis, founder and director of the Louise Lawrence Transgender Archive and curator of the GLBT Historical Society’s Doris Fish: Ego as Artform exhibition, Seligman will discuss the life of this outrageous performer and artist and how we can reflect on Doris Fish’s legacy as a guide and inspiration in the fight against current conservative backlash against drag.


SPEAKERS

Craig Seligman (he/him/his) has written for and edited at a host of magazines, journals, newspapers, and websites. He is the author of Sontag and Kael: Opposites Attract Me (2004). He lives in Brooklyn.

Ms. Bob Davis (she/her/hers) is the founder and director of the Louise Lawrence Transgender Archive. In the 1990s she served two terms on the GLBT Historical Society Board of Directors.

Location

GLBT Historical Society Museum, 4127 18th St., San Francisco, CA 94114


Admission

Admission is free for members and $5 for non-members. This event will likely sell out, so guests are encouraged to reserve their tickets early. Tickets are available here.


Join the GLBT Historical Society

Become a member of the GLBT Historical Society for free museum and program admission, discounts in the museum shop and other perks throughout the year.

Photo Caption: Who Does That Bitch Think She Is?: Doris Fish and the Rise of Drag cover art, courtesy of PublicAffairs, 2023

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May
3
11:00 AM11:00

Free Museum Day

The GLBT Historical Society Museum is free to all visitors on the first Wednesday of every month. Tickets are not available online on free days; all visitors will be welcomed to the museum as long as there is capacity on a first-come, first-served basis. If you have any questions regarding an upcoming free day, contact us at tickets@glbthistory.org.

This free day is sponsored by the Bob Ross Foundation.

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Jun
7
11:00 AM11:00

Free Museum Day

The GLBT Historical Society Museum is free to all visitors on the first Wednesday of every month. Tickets are not available online on free days; all visitors will be welcomed to the museum as long as there is capacity on a first-come, first-served basis. If you have any questions regarding an upcoming free day, contact us at tickets@glbthistory.org.

This free day is sponsored by the Bob Ross Foundation.

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Apr
5
11:00 AM11:00

Free Museum Day

The GLBT Historical Society Museum is free to all visitors on the first Wednesday of every month. Tickets are not available online on free days; all visitors will be welcomed to the museum as long as there is capacity on a first-come, first-served basis. If you have any questions regarding an upcoming free day, contact us at tickets@glbthistory.org.

This free day is sponsored by the Bob Ross Foundation.

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Mar
24
6:30 PM18:30

Matchmaking in the Archive, Opening Reception & Book Launch

Tina Takemoto posing with an archival image of Jiro Onuma. Photo by E. G. Crichton

Note: tickets for this event are currently sold out.

LGBTQ people owe a lot to past generations, yet our historical inheritances are still too often lost or buried. Working with the archives of the GLBT Historical Society, artist E.G. Crichton decided to do something to bridge this generational loss of memory.

This event celebrates the launch of E.G.’s new book, Matchmaking in the Archive: 19 Conversations with the Dead and 3 Encounters with Ghosts and a companion exhibition at the GLBT Historical Society museum. The program will include a panel with project participants and light refreshments. 

Program

6:30 - 7:00 Reception

7:00 - 8:00 Panel Presentation

8:00 - 9:00 Reception

About the Book & Exhibition

In Matchmaking in the Archive: 19 Conversations with the Dead and 3 Encounters with Ghosts, E.G. takes us on a captivating journey through the archive and into the relationships she fostered between living and dead collaborators. This book, part of the new Q+Public series from Rutgers University Press, narrates E.G.’s matchmaking process, the intimate relationships that developed, and the creative work that emerged. She added three new collaborators, Jonathan Katz, Michelle Tea and Chris Vargas, who each describe their own encounters with the ghosts of queer history. Both text and images make the archive come alive in remarkably intimate ways. This exhibition shows some of the portraits E.G. made of living participants as they interacted with their archive matches. Books will be available for purchase.

About E.G. Crichton

E.G. Crichton is an interdisciplinary artist living in Richmond, CA. Her projects have been exhibited in Asia, Australia, Europe, and across the United States. Crichton is a Professor Emerita at the University of California Santa Cruz, and served as Artist-in-Residence at the GLBT Historical Society from 2008 to 2014.

Location

GLBT Historical Society Museum, 4127 18th St., San Francisco, CA 94114

Admission

Admission is free, but space is limited and booking advanced tickets is recommended. Walk-ins will be accommodated as space allows. Tickets are available here.

Join the GLBT Historical Society

Become a member of the GLBT Historical Society for free museum and program admission, discounts in the museum shop and other perks throughout the year.

View Event →
Mar
1
11:00 AM11:00

Free Museum Day

The GLBT Historical Society Museum is free to all visitors on the first Wednesday of every month. Tickets are not available online on free days; all visitors will be welcomed to the museum as long as there is capacity on a first-come, first-served basis. If you have any questions regarding an upcoming free day, contact us at tickets@glbthistory.org.

This free day is sponsored by the Bob Ross Foundation.

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Feb
1
11:00 AM11:00

GLBT Historical Society Free Museum Day

  • GLBT Historical Society Museum (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

The GLBT Historical Society Museum is free to all visitors on Wednesday, February 1. Tickets are not available online on free days; all visitors will be welcomed to the museum as long as there is capacity on a first-come, first-served basis. If you have any questions regarding an upcoming free day, contact us at tickets@glbthistory.org.

This free day is sponsored by the Bob Ross Foundation.

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Jan
4
11:00 AM11:00

GLBT Historical Society Free Museum Day

The GLBT Historical Society Museum is free to all visitors on Wednesday, January 4. Tickets are not available online on free days; all visitors will be welcomed to the museum as long as there is capacity on a first-come, first-served basis. If you have any questions regarding an upcoming free day, contact us at tickets@glbthistory.org.

This free day is sponsored by the Bob Ross Foundation.

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Oct
19
6:00 PM18:00

Gala | Reunion: The GLBT Historical Society 2022 Gala

Location

The Green Room

San Francisco War Memorial and Performing Arts Center

401 Van Ness Ave.

San Francisco, CA 94102

About Reunion

Reunion is the GLBT Historical Society’s annual Gala, where we gather to celebrate our vast queer past, honor the history makers who move our communities forward, and raise funds to keep LGBTQ history alive. The event includes a reception, awards presentations, a silent auction, and the opportunity to connect with a wide range of LGBTQ history supporters. Traditionally held in October to coincide with LGBTQ history month, the Gala has been held virtually for the last two years and is returning in-person in 2022.

For complete information about Reunion, click here.

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Sep
7
10:30 AM10:30

GLBT Historical Society Free Museum Day

  • GLBT Historical Society Museum (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

The GLBT Historical Society Museum is free to all visitors on Wednesday, September 7. Tickets are not available online on free days; all visitors will be welcomed to the museum as long as there is capacity on a first-come, first-served basis. If you have any questions regarding an upcoming free day, contact us at tickets@glbthistory.org.

This free day is sponsored by the Bob Ross Foundation.

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Aug
3
10:30 AM10:30

GLBT Historical Society Free Museum Day

The GLBT Historical Society Museum is free to all visitors on Wednesday, August 3. Tickets are not available online on free days; all visitors will be welcomed to the museum as long as there is capacity on a first-come, first-served basis. If you have any questions regarding an upcoming free day, contact us at tickets@glbthistory.org.

This free day is sponsored by the Bob Ross Foundation.

View Event →
Jun
12
11:00 AM11:00

GLBT Historical Society Free Museum Day

The GLBT Historical Society Museum is free to all visitors on June 12. Tickets are not available online on free days; all visitors will be welcomed to the museum as long as there is capacity on a first-come, first-served basis. If you have any questions regarding an upcoming free day, contact us at tickets@glbthistory.org.

Sunday, June 12: Free Day sponsored by Big Run Studios, part of Doors Open California.

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Jun
11
11:00 AM11:00

GLBT Historical Society Free Museum Day

The GLBT Historical Society Museum is free to all visitors on June 11. Tickets are not available online on free days; all visitors will be welcomed to the museum as long as there is capacity on a first-come, first-served basis. If you have any questions regarding an upcoming free day, contact us at tickets@glbthistory.org.

Saturday, June 11: Free Day sponsored by Big Run Studios, part of Doors Open California.

View Event →
Jun
4
11:00 AM11:00

GLBT Historical Society Free Museum Day

The GLBT Historical Society Museum is free to all visitors on June 4. Tickets are not available online on free days; all visitors will be welcomed to the museum as long as there is capacity on a first-come, first-served basis. If you have any questions regarding an upcoming free day, contact us at tickets@glbthistory.org.

Saturday, June 4: Free Day sponsored by the Castro LGBTQ Cultural District.

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Jun
1
11:00 AM11:00

GLBT Historical Society Free Museum Day

The GLBT Historical Society Museum is free to all visitors on June 1. Tickets are not available online on free days; all visitors will be welcomed to the museum as long as there is capacity on a first-come, first-served basis. If you have any questions regarding an upcoming free day, contact us at tickets@glbthistory.org.

Wednesday, June 1: Free day sponsored by the Bob Ross Foundation.

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May
13
5:30 PM17:30

Community Event | Into the Vault: A Behind-the-Scenes Tour of the Archives

The stacks in the GLBT Historical Society’s vault; photograph by Dave Earl.

DESCRIPTION

You’ve seen highlights from our archival collections on social media and in programs. Now join us on a behind-the-scenes look at the work of the GLBT Historical Society archivists. You’ll learn how archival staff preserve and share LGBTQ historical material, including processing collections, managing donations, digitizing records and more. You’ll get a peek into the vault, where the archivists will share some of their favorite pieces. Finally, we’ll be introducing a new workshop program we are launching this year that provides free archival skills training to the public. Speakers will include Kelsi Evans, our director of archives and special collections; Isaac Fellman, reference archivist; and Megan Needels, project archivist. They will also be joined by members of our Archives Working Group, a volunteer advisory group consisting of local archivists, historians and others in related fields.

SPEAKERS

Kelsi Evans (she/her): Kelsi Evans is the Director of the Dr. John P. De Cecco Archives and Special Collections at the GLBT Historical Society, and has been serving as Interim Co-Executive Director since September. Prior to joining the society, she worked on the AIDS History Project at the University of California, San Francisco Archives and Special Collections and managed archival projects at the Fales Library of New York University, the Lowe Art Museum at the University of Miami, and the Foundation for Landscape Studies. Kelsi holds an M.A. in archives and public history from New York University and an M.A. in history from the University of California, Santa Cruz. She is active in professional organizations, including the Society of California Archivists and the Society of American Archivists.

Isaac Fellman (he/him) is reference archivist at the GLBT Historical Society. He has worked in archives at the California Historical Society, the Charles M. Schulz Museum and Oregon Health and Science University. He earned his MLS from Emporia State University and his M.A. in English from the University of Oregon. Isaac is also a Lambda Literary Award-winning writer.

Megan Needels (she/they) is project archivist at the GLBT Historical Society. She has worked in various Bay Area archives, including Canyon Cinema, the Prelinger Archives, San Francisco Cinematheque and Oddball Films. They hold an MLIS in media archival studies from the University of California, Los Angeles and a BA in film and digital media production from the University of California, Santa Cruz.

HOW TO PARTICIPATE

This event will take place online. After you register, you will receive a confirmation email with a link and instructions on how to join.

ADMISSION

$5 | Free for members

Register online here: https://bit.ly/3wfcIlf

 

ASL INTERPRETATION

ASL interpretation provided upon request. Please write at least three days in advance of event to leigh@glbthistory.org.

 

JOIN THE GLBT HISTORICAL SOCIETY

Become a member of the GLBT Historical Society for free museum and program admission, discounts in the museum shop and other perks: www.glbthistory.org/memberships.

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Mar
4
6:00 PM18:00

Mighty Reels | Shining Queer Blue Light on LGBTQ Life

Headshot of John Carr, photograph by Michael Lownie. Stills from various Queer Blue Light tapes, ca. 1975–1981; Daniel A. Smith and Queer Blue Light Videotapes (1999-52), GLBT Historical Society.

DESCRIPTION 

Last year the GLBT Historical Society digitized a unique archival collection, the Daniel A. Smith and Queer Blue Light Videotapes, which consists of nearly 100 half-inch videotapes recorded by the Queer Blue Light (QBL) Collective. QBL was a grassroots guerilla project that documented the politics and culture of the local LGBTQ community in the 1970s. While the majority of the tapes document QBL activities, they also contain footage by QBL members of friends relaxing together and living everyday life. In this installment of our “Mighty Reels” program series, we’ll screen some of our favorite tapes and speak with John Carr, a longtime friend of Daniel Smith, who is featured in the footage as the host of a 1980 “Leap Day” dinner party. He will discuss how viewing the footage was like “finding the Rosetta Stone” of his life in 1970s queer San Francisco.

Highlighting home movies, drag performances, amateur documentaries, and interviews with queer history-makers, “Mighty Reels” is a quarterly program series that provides an intimate look at the LGBTQ past straight from the camera lens. Each program in the series features a screening of footage from the archives, followed by a discussion with historians, community members and activists on the significance of these images. 

SPEAKER

John Carr (he/him) grew up in Colorado and has lived in San Francisco for the past 47 years, where he had a landscaping company until his retirement in 2004. Michael Lownie, his life partner of 19 years, is a fine artist.

HOW TO PARTICIPATE

This event will take place online. After you register, you will receive a confirmation email with a link and instructions on how to join.

ADMISSION

$5 | Free for members

Register online here: https://bit.ly/3tU5kL9

ASL INTERPRETATION

ASL interpretation provided upon request. Please write at least three days in advance of event to leigh@glbthistory.org.

JOIN THE GLBT HISTORICAL SOCIETY

Become a member of the GLBT Historical Society for free museum and program admission, discounts in the museum shop and other perks: www.glbthistory.org/memberships.

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Feb
25
6:00 PM18:00

Author Talk | Uncovering the Queer History of the Women’s Suffrage Movement

Cover image for Public Faces, Secret Lives: A Queer History of the Women’s Suffrage Movement courtesy of NYU Press. Headshot of author Wendy L. Rouse, used with permission.

DESCRIPTION

The traditional narrative of women’s suffrage history sanitized the lives of lesbian and queer suffragists, leading to the erasure of the queer history of the movement. Yet, it was often queer suffragists who helped propel the movement forward, as they challenged the gender and sexual norms of their day. In this talk showcasing her newest book, Public Faces, Secret Lives: A Queer History of the Women’s Suffrage Movement, historian Wendy Rouse will share the results of her efforts to recover the queer history of the fight for the vote.

SPEAKERS

Wendy L. Rouse (she/her) is a historian specializing in recovering the stories of women and children in the United States during the Progressive Era. In addition to Public Faces, Secret Lives: A Queer History of the Women's Suffrage Movement (NYU Press, 2022), Rouse is also the author of Her Own Hero: The Origins of the Women's Self-Defense Movement (NYU Press, 2017) which examines the emergence of women’s self-defense alongside the first-wave of feminism during the Progressive Era; and Children of Chinatown: Growing up Chinese American in San Francisco (UNC Press, 2009) which explores the lives of Chinese American children during the era of Chinese exclusion. Rouse is an Associate Professor of History at San Jose State University.

HOW TO PARTICIPATE

This event will take place online. After you register, you will receive a confirmation email with a link and instructions on how to join.

ADMISSION

$5 | Free for members

Register online here: https://bit.ly/30SqoFs

ASL INTERPRETATION

ASL interpretation provided upon request. Please write at least three days in advance of event to leigh@glbthistory.org.

JOIN THE GLBT HISTORICAL SOCIETY

Become a member of the GLBT Historical Society for free museum and program admission, discounts in the museum shop and other perks: www.glbthistory.org/memberships.

ABOUT THE BOOK

For more information about Public Faces, Secret Lives: A Queer History of the Women's Suffrage Movement, see the publisher’s webpage here: https://nyupress.org/9781479813940/public-faces-secret-lives/.

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Feb
4
6:00 PM18:00

Queeriosity Corner | Hidden Gems From the Society’s Vault

Homemade dartboard with a centered image of Anita Bryant, ca. 1978; Art and Artifacts Collection (GLBT-ART), GLBT Historical Society.

DESCRIPTION

GLBT Historical Society archives staff members will present a veritable treasure trove of hidden LGBTQ history gems from the archives vault. Curatorial specialist Ramón Silvestre, reference archivist Isaac Fellman and project archivist Megan Needels have selected some of the most unusual and surprising material objects in the archives and will discuss their historical significance. The program culminates with the unveiling of a recently acquired artifact from the Tool Box Bar, SoMa’s most influential leather bar of the early 1960s, that has never been seen by the public.

“Queeriosity Corner” is a quarterly program series led by Silvestre that showcases treasured physical objects from the archives. Each program in the series explores a few such select items, including paintings, sculptures, objects, costumes, drawings, posters, photographs and ephemera, most of which have never been on public display. The series also features conversations with other museum professionals on display and curation best practices, institutional partnerships and related topics, all in delightfully entertaining queer show-and-tell format.

SPEAKERS

Isaac Fellman (he/him) is the reference archivist for the GLBT Historical Society. Isaac has worked in archives at the California Historical Society, the Charles M. Schulz Museum and Oregon Health and Science University. He earned his MLS from Emporia State University and his M.A. in English from the University of Oregon. Isaac is also a Lambda Literary Award-winning writer.

Megan Needels (she/her or they/them) is the project archivist for the GLBT Historical Society. Megan has worked in various Bay Area archives, including Canyon Cinema, the Prelinger Archives, San Francisco Cinematheque and Oddball Films. She holds an MLIS in media archival studies from the University of California, Los Angeles and a BA in film and digital media production from the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Ramón Silvestre (he/him) is the Museum Registrar and Curatorial Specialist for the GLBT Historical Society and is an expert in material culture studies. He previously was a Visiting Fellow at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History and has published in many national and international professional journals, including The Smithsonian Institution Scholarly Press. He holds a Ph.D. in anthropology and a master’s degree in curatorial and museum studies from the University of Arizona, School of Anthropology. He has conducted fieldwork and museum collections acquisitions among the Kalinga and Ifugao tribes in northern Philippines, the Iban in Indonesia and the Dayak in Borneo.

HOW TO PARTICIPATE

This event will take place online. After you register, you will receive a confirmation email with a link and instructions on how to join.

ADMISSION

$5 | Free for members

Register online here: https://bit.ly/3qos16r

ASL INTERPRETATION

ASL interpretation provided upon request. Please write at least three days in advance of event to leigh@glbthistory.org.

JOIN THE GLBT HISTORICAL SOCIETY

Become a member of the GLBT Historical Society for free museum and program admission, discounts in the museum shop and other perks: www.glbthistory.org/memberships.

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Jan
21
6:00 PM18:00

Author Talk | Brewing a Boycott: Where LGBTQ and Labor Activism Intersect

Image: Brewing a Boycott cover featuring boycott broadside, ca. 1974-1975, printed by the Howard Quinn Co., courtesy of the San Francisco Public Library. Headshot photograph of author Allyson Brantley by Molly Zimmerman. Headshot photograph of Miriam Frank by Desma Holcomb.

DESCRIPTION

Historians Miriam Frank and Allyson Brantley will discuss the long and interwoven history of LGBTQ and labor activism through the lens of Brantley’s new book, Brewing a Boycott: How a Grassroots Coalition Fought Coors and Remade American Consumer Activism (University of North Carolina Press, 2021). Drawing on oral histories and archival collections, including those held by the GLBT Historical Society, Brantley details how activists across the nation, from gay liberationists to Chicano activists and union members, built supportive, vibrant coalitions. Over decades of organizing and coalition-building from the 1950s to the 1990s, they molded the boycott into a powerful means of political protest, challenging the Coors Brewing Company’s antiunion, discriminatory, anti-LGBTQ practices and conservative political ties. This talk will examine the particular success of the boycott in New York, San Francisco and Los Angeles and consider its impact in light of contemporary ongoing conversations about consumer power and corporate buyouts.

SPEAKERS

Allyson Brantley (she/her) is assistant professor of history at the University of La Verne. She studies, teaches and writes about social movements and radical coalitions in the late 20th century United States. She received her Ph.D. from Yale University in 2016 and she is a 2020–2021 Mellon Emerging Faculty Leader. She currently lives in Los Angeles, and her work has appeared in the Washington Post, the Pacific Historical Review, and the Radical History Review.

Miriam Frank (she/her) began her academic career in Detroit during the 1970s as a professor of women’s studies at Wayne County Community College. Via museum tours and after-work reading circles at union halls, she went on to develop community programs sponsored by the National Endowment for the Humanities that emphasized the great artistic, literary, and cinematic cultures of Detroit’s historic working-class communities. During the mid-1980s and for the next thirty-five years Dr. Frank taught humanities in New York University’s liberal studies program. In 1995 she began research on Out in the Union: A Labor History of Queer America (Temple University Press, 2014), a history of collaboration between two vital movements in the twentieth century which was named a Choice outstanding academic title.

HOW TO PARTICIPATE

This event will take place online. After you register, you will receive a confirmation email with a link and instructions on how to join.

ADMISSION

$5 | Free for members

Register online here: https://bit.ly/3HAaosj

ASL INTERPRETATION

ASL interpretation provided upon request. Please write at least three days in advance of event to leigh@glbthistory.org.

JOIN THE GLBT HISTORICAL SOCIETY

Become a member of the GLBT Historical Society for free museum and program admission, discounts in the museum shop and other perks: www.glbthistory.org/memberships.

ABOUT THE BOOK

For more information about Brewing a Boycott, see the publisher’s webpage here: https://uncpress.org/book/9781469661032/brewing-a-boycott/.

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Dec
10
6:00 PM18:00

Author Talk | The Engagement: The Struggle for Same-Sex Marriage

Headshot of Sasha Issenberg by Carlos Chavarría. Cover of The Engagement courtesy of Pantheon Books.

DESCRIPTION

On June 26, 2015, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that state bans on same-sex marriage were unconstitutional, legalizing such marriages across the United States. But the road to that momentous decision was much longer than many know. Author Sasha Issenberg presents his new book The Engagement: America’s Quarter-Century Struggle Over Same-Sex Marriage (Pantheon Books, 2021). His definitive account of this monumental civil-rights struggle vividly guides us along same-sex marriage’s unexpected path from the unimaginable to the inevitable. The Engagement’s richly detailed narrative follows the coast-to-coast conflict through courtrooms and war rooms, bedrooms and boardrooms, to shed light on every aspect of a political and legal controversy that resolutely divided Americans.

SPEAKERS

Sasha Issenberg (he/him) is the author of three previous books on topics ranging from the global sushi business to medical tourism and the science of political campaigns. He covered the 2008 election as a national political reporter in the Washington bureau of The Boston Globe, the 2012 election for Slate, the 2016 election for Bloomberg Politics and Businessweek, and the 2020 election for The Recount. He is the Washington correspondent for Monocle, and has also written for New York magazine, The New York Times Magazine, and George, where he served as a contributing editor. He teaches in the political science department at the University of California at Los Angeles.

HOW TO PARTICIPATE

This event will take place online. After you register, you will receive a confirmation email with a link and instructions on how to join.

ADMISSION

Free | $5 suggested donation

Register online here: https://bit.ly/3w1IlwE

ASL INTERPRETATION

ASL interpretation provided upon request. Please write at least three days in advance of event to leigh@glbthistory.org.

JOIN THE GLBT HISTORICAL SOCIETY

Become a member of the GLBT Historical Society for free museum and program admission, discounts in the museum shop and other perks: www.glbthistory.org/memberships.

ABOUT THE BOOK

For more information about Engagement, see the publisher’s webpage.

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Nov
19
6:00 PM18:00

Panel Discussion | Two-Spirit Identities: Language, Community & Tradition

DESCRIPTION

 In honor of both Native American Heritage Month and Transgender Awareness Week in November, this program brings together a panel of Two-Spirit people for a conversation about the rich complexity of Two-Spirit identity. Panelists will explore the various ways that Two-Spirit people construct their identities through tribal affiliation and LGBTQ terminology, including under the transgender umbrella. They’ll also consider how queerness in indigenous communities has been historically defined and understood and how these traditions have been maintained or adapted in the present.

SPEAKERS

Sam Campbell (they/them) is a board member with Bay Area American Indian Two Spirits (BAAITS) where they serve as the drum keeper. As an indigenous scholar, they dedicate their time to advocating for indigenous rights and issues surrounding missing and murdered indigenous women and girls. And as a queer studies scholar, they continually fight for trans and Two-Spirit equity along with safety advocacy. 

Faun Harjo (he/him) is a transmasculine/Two-Spirit artist who was born and raised in Oklahoma. Now residing in San Francisco, he performs amongst his peers and family.

J. Miko Thomas (moderator, she/her), better known as Landa Lakes, is Chickasaw and is on the board of Bay Area American Indian Two-Spirits (BAAITS) and the Council of Grand Dukes and Duchesses of San Francisco. She is a former board member of the GLBT Historical Society.

 Amelia Vigil (they/she) is an urban-indigenous/Xicano, Two-Spirit poet, outdoor educator, and identical twin. Their indigenous heritage is Picuris Pueblo from her father and Purepecha from her mother. They are mixed Spanish/New Mexican. They have been involved with Bay Area American Indian Two-Spirits (BAAITS) since 2013, joined the board of directors in 2015, and were recently appointed interim executive director. Amelia has earned degrees from Feather River Community College and Mills College. They are a recent graduate from the Institute for American Indian Arts with an MFA in poetry.

HOW TO PARTICIPATE

This event will take place online. After you register, you will receive a confirmation email with a link and instructions on how to join.

ADMISSION

Free | $5 suggested donation

Register online here: https://bit.ly/3iCYMtQ

ASL INTERPRETATION

ASL interpretation provided upon request. Please write at least three days in advance of event to leigh@glbthistory.org.

JOIN THE GLBT HISTORICAL SOCIETY

Become a member of the GLBT Historical Society for free museum and program admission, discounts in the museum shop and other perks: www.glbthistory.org/memberships.

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Nov
16
5:30 PM17:30

Community Event | A GLBT Historical Society Town Hall

The entrance to the Main Gallery of the GLBT Historical Society Museum; photograph by Dave Earl.

DESCRIPTION

Join members of the staff and board of the GLBT Historical Society for a town hall where we will share some highlights from the past year, provide updates about current projects and initiatives, and share exciting plans for the future. The program will include a Q & A session; guests are encouraged to submit questions in advance by emailing info@glbthistory.org with the subject “Town Hall.”

Image: The entrance to the Main Gallery of the GLBT Historical Society Museum; photograph by Dave Earl.

SPEAKERS

Kelsi Evans (she/her/hers) is the interim co-executive director of the GLBT Historical Society and Director of the Dr. John P. De Cecco Archives & Special Collections. She previously served as Project Archivist for the AIDS History Project at the University of California, San Francisco Archives and Special Collections. Prior to UCSF, she worked at NYU’s Fales Library and Special Collections and the Lowe Art Museum at the University of Miami. Kelsi holds an M.A. in archives and public history from New York University and an M.A. in history from the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Andrew Shaffer (he/him/his) is the interim co-executive director of the GLBT Historical Society and the director of development and communications. He directs the GLBT Historical Society’s outreach, media and fundraising programs. Prior to joining the society, he led development efforts with multiple local nonprofits including the Immigrant Legal Resource Center and the California Preservation Foundation. He is also trained as a historian, and his academic background includes graduate work at the University of San Francisco and the University of Wisconsin, Madison, where he helped to build that city’s first permanent LGBTQ archives. 

HOW TO PARTICIPATE

This event will take place online. After you register, you will receive a confirmation email with a link and instructions on how to join.

ADMISSION

Free

Register online here: https://bit.ly/3AiGJPs

ASL INTERPRETATION

ASL interpretation provided upon request. Please write at least three days in advance of event to leigh@glbthistory.org.

JOIN THE GLBT HISTORICAL SOCIETY

Become a member of the GLBT Historical Society for free museum and program admission, discounts in the museum shop and other perks: www.glbthistory.org/memberships.

View Event →
Nov
12
6:00 PM18:00

Film Screening | The Amazing Life of Margot Heuman: A Lesbian Holocaust Survivor

Headshots, left to right: photo of Dr. Anna Hájková, copyright seed9; photo of Erika Hughes, courtesy of same; photo of Dr. Phoebe Rumsey, courtesy of same; photo of Ayse Evans, courtesy of same. Production photographs from The Amazing Life of Margot Heuman by Erika Hughes.

DESCRIPTION

 Born in 1928 in Germany, Margot Heuman is a survivor of the Theresienstadt ghetto and the Auschwitz, Neuengamme, and Bergen-Belsen concentration camps. She is perhaps the first lesbian survivor of the Holocaust to relay her story. The Amazing Life of Margot Heuman is a new play that draws on interviews conducted by Warwick University historian Anna Hájková. The play offers a poignant look at the coming of age of a Jewish queer woman in the concentration camps and reflects on love; choices; sexual violence and sexual barter; homophobia; and survival. Moving, funny, pragmatic and original, Margot Heuman reminds us of humanity within the society of Holocaust victims, but also of the stories that have been erased by homophobia. Join us for a screening of this work of documentary theater that layers Heuman’s testimony with archival imagery and projection, originally streamed online for its premiere at the Brighton Fringe Festival in June 2021. The screening will be followed by a conversation with playwright and interviewer Anna Hájková and director Erika Hughes. This event is being cosponsored by the Jewish Family and Children’s Services (JFCS) Holocaust Center.

SPEAKERS

Ayse Evans (she/her/hers) portrays Margot in the recorded film of The Amazing Life of Margot Heuman. She is a writer, performer and facilitator. Her acting credits include Scattering Salt at the Brighton Fringe Festival and After the Flood at DarkFest. Ayse is an alum of the Royal Court introduction to playwrighting program and has been supported by both Mrs. C’s Collective and the London Playwrights Workshop.

Dr. Anna Hájková (she/her/hers) is associate professor of history at the University of Warwick. She is the author of The Last Ghetto: An Everyday History of Theresienstadt. She is a pioneer of queer Holocaust history.

Dr. Erika Hughes (she/her/hers) is the director and co-author of The Amazing Life of Margot Heuman. She is reader in performance at the University of Portsmouth. She is the author of the forthcoming book Holocaust Memory and Youth Performance. Her work as a director has been seen on stages in the United States, United Kingdom, Pakistan, Israel and Germany.

Dr. Phoebe Rumsey (she/her/hers) portrays Anna in the recorded film of The Amazing Life of Margot Heuman. She is Senior Lecturer in Musical Theatre at the University of Portsmouth. She is the author of the forthcoming book Embodied Nostalgia and has worked extensively as a dancer, choreographer, and performer in Canada, the United States, and Japan.

HOW TO PARTICIPATE

This event will take place online. After you register, you will receive a confirmation email with a link and instructions on how to join.

ADMISSION

Free | $5 suggested donation

Register online here: https://bit.ly/3B1LzSh

ASL INTERPRETATION

ASL interpretation provided upon request. Please write at least three days in advance of event to leigh@glbthistory.org.

JOIN THE GLBT HISTORICAL SOCIETY

Become a member of the GLBT Historical Society for free museum and program admission, discounts in the museum shop and other perks: www.glbthistory.org/memberships.

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Nov
5
6:00 PM18:00

Queeriosity Corner | Genderfuck and Drag Artwork

Portrait of Ambi Sextrous, Doris Fish (Australia, 1952–1991), acrylic on canvas, 16” x 19”, 1978; Ms. Bob Davis Collection (2012-16), GLBT Historical Society. Untitled, Jerome Caja (1958–1995), mixed media, 5” x 9”, ca. 1980–1990; donated by Gerard Koskovich from the collection of David Bonetti, Art and Artifacts Collection (GLBT-ART), GLBT Historical Society.

DESCRIPTION

In this installment of our “Queeriosity Corner” program series, GLBT Historical Society museum registrar and curatorial specialist Ramón Silvestre and a panel of queer art scholars will present some of the fine artworks in the society’s collections that highlight the creativity, colorful palette and lives of prominent drag artists working at the height of the AIDS crisis. From Doris Fish’s evocative portrait of Ambi Sextrous to the surreal, sometimes grotesque mixed-media artworks of Jerome Caja, this program will examine how genderfuck and drag artists confronted a pandemic through artwork.

“Queeriosity Corner” is a quarterly program series led by Silvestre that showcases treasured physical objects from the archives’ Art and Artifacts collection. Each program in the series explores a few select items in this collection, which includes paintings, sculptures, objects, costumes, drawings, posters, photographs and ephemera, most of which have never been on public display. The series also features conversations with other museum professionals on display and curation best practices, institutional partnerships and related topics, all in delightfully entertaining queer show-and-tell format.

SPEAKERS 

Anthony Cianciolo (he/him/his) is a Bay Area artist, curator and filmmaker. Currently he is directing a documentary feature film about Jerome Caja and also manages Caja’s estate through “The Jerome Project” website. He recently collaborated with the GLBT Historical Society and curated the exhibition “Found: The Lost Art of Jerome Caja (May–June, 2021) at Anglim/Trimble gallery. Cianciolo also works in independent film and TV (Sony’s “Venom,” Netflix’s “Sense8” and HBO’s “Looking”). Prior to this, he worked on cutting-edge films that fused animation with live action (“Natural Born Killers,” “Tank Girl,” “Space Jam”) and animated films (“The Iron Giant,” “Osmosis Jones,” “Looney Tunes”). He also helped establish Warner Brothers’s Feature Animation division, where he worked as an art director, technical director, compositor and animator.

Ms. Bob Davis (she/her/hers) is the founder and director of the Louise Lawrence Transgender Archive in Vallejo, California. In the 1990s she served two terms on the GLBT Historical Society Board of Directors. She presented her talk “Glamour, Drag and Death: HIV/AIDS in the Art of Three Drag Queen Painters” at the Archives, Museums and Special Collections conference “Queering Memory 2019” in Berlin and virtually at the University of Victoria’s “Moving Trans History Forward” conference in 2020. She published an article based on the talk in Transgender Studies Quarterly earlier this year. Ms. Bob teaches music at Napa Valley College.

Stevyn Polk (he/him/his) is a Bay Area artist, musician, and global traveler. Currently he is in an experimental synth-pop band called Crumpled Tissu and has been working as an advisor on The Jerome Project since its inception in 2010. He recently helped produce the JEROME & JOAN: Late Night with Joan Jett Blakk (June 19, 2021) at Minnesota Street Projects, which was part of their Juneteenth celebration. Polk was a Music Director, Program Director and DJ at several independent radio stations both in Cleveland, Ohio and San Francisco. He also co-founded the notorious Club Häagen-Dazs in the Castro in the late 1980s. Currently, Polk continues his 20+ year career in the tourism industry, designing, training, and leading trips on all seven continents. He has walked solo across North America and followed years later in 2013 with a more than 3,000-mile hike from Gibraltar to Istanbul. He is currently planning his next major trek.

Ramón Silvestre (he/him/his) is an expert in material culture studies. He previously was a Visiting Fellow at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History and has published in many national and international professional journals, including The Smithsonian Institution Scholarly Press. He holds a Ph.D. in anthropology and a master’s degree in curatorial and museum studies from the University of Arizona, School of Anthropology. He has conducted fieldwork and museum collections acquisitions among the Kalinga and Ifugao tribes in northern Philippines, the Iban in Indonesia and the Dayak in Borneo.

HOW TO PARTICIPATE

This event will take place online. After you register, you will receive a confirmation email with a link and instructions on how to join.

ADMISSION

Free | $5 suggested donation

Register online here: https://bit.ly/3utBo6I

ASL INTERPRETATION

ASL interpretation provided upon request. Please write at least three days in advance of event to leigh@glbthistory.org.

JOIN THE GLBT HISTORICAL SOCIETY

Become a member of the GLBT Historical Society for free museum and program admission, discounts in the museum shop and other perks: www.glbthistory.org/memberships.

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Oct
29
5:00 PM17:00

Panel Discussion | Who Was Sally Gearhart? Remembering a Lesbian Legend

Sally Gearhart speaking at a No on 6 demonstration; photo by Steve Savage, used with permission.

EVENT DESCRIPTION

Sally Gearhart (1931–2021) was an American teacher, feminist, science-fiction writer, and political activist who passed away in July. In 1973, she became the first out lesbian to obtain a tenure-track faculty position when she was hired by San Francisco State University, where she helped establish one of the first women’s and gender studies programs in the country. Among her contributions to the struggle for LGBTQ rights was her fight against Proposition 6, also known as the Briggs Initiative, a 1978 California ballot measure that would have prevented LGBTQ people from teaching in the state’s public schools.

This panel discussion and celebration of Gearhart’s life brings together four women who worked closely with Gearhart. They will explore topics including Gearhart’s contributions to feminism and gay rights; her academic work; her literary and creative output, including the 1978 work The Wanderground; her interventions on the subject of religion and communications; and how her background in theater and communications shaped her activism, with an overall emphasis on capturing Gearhart’s delightfully quirky and humorous personality. Tickets are free, but donations will be earmarked to support a documentary currently in progress about Gearhart’s life.

SPEAKERS

Deborah Craig (moderator, she/her/hers) is an award-winning documentary director and producer whose films use compelling personal stories to raise awareness about the challenges and strengths of underrepresented communities. Her work has played at LGBTQ, women’s and documentary film festivals in the U.S. and internationally. Craig’s credits include The Verde Garden: Growing a Healthy Community (producer/director, 2007); Living Positive (producer/director, 2008); One Sister at a Time: Positive Women’s Stories (producer/director, 2009); I’m Gonna Be Here (director, 2010); Still Around, a virtual classroom (producer, 2016); and Surviving Voices: Women and AIDS (producer, 2017). Craig met Sally Gearhart in 2014 while making her latest short, A Great Ride (2018), a 33-minute documentary about several lesbians aging with humor and zest for life. The film premiered at the Frameline Festival in 2018 and since then has screened at over 50 film festivals around the globe and won multiple audience and jury awards.

Dorothy Haecker (she/her/hers) is a native Texan with a decades-long teaching career in women’s studies and feminist philosophy. A veteran of the civil rights and women’s liberation movements, Dr. Haecker participated in the founding of multicultural women’s studies programs in California and Missouri. She first met Sally Gearhart in 1961 and together they learned to love their lesbian selves and reimagine the world. Haecker retired from full-time teaching in 2014 and has continued to revel in feminist philosophy classes since then. She is a lifelong science-fiction and fantasy reader and especially loves the works of Gearhart, LeGuin, and Russ. She is a very blue dot in a blue city and county in a very red state, but she has found that she cannot do without mesquite trees and a Texas crescent moon. 

Ruth Mahaney (she/her/hers) moved to San Francisco in 1971, when she was 26 years old and had just come out as a lesbian. She taught women’s studies at Santa Rosa Junior College, Sonoma State University, San Francisco State University (SFSU) and now teaches LGBTQ American History at the City College of San Francisco. Mahaney was a member of the collective that ran Modern Times Bookstore for 35 years, and served on the board of directors of the GLBT Historical Society for 20 years. She was a colleague of Sally Gearhart’s at SFSU, and both were part of a group called the Lesbian Caucus which formed after the 1978 assassination of Harvey Milk to lobby the city to promote lesbian rights. Other members included Del Martin and Phyllis Lyon, Pat Norman, Roma Guy and Donna Hitchens.

Cherríe Moraga (she/her/hers) is an internationally recognized poet, playwright, and essayist who is best known as the co-editor of the avant-garde feminist work, This Bridge Called My Back: Writings by Radical Women of Color. As an essayist and poet, Moraga has published several collections of writings, including: A Xicana Codex of Changing Consciousness and Loving in The War Years. In 2019, Farrar, Straus and Giroux released her latest work, Native Country of the Heart: A Memoir. She is the recipient of the United States Artist Rockefeller Fellowship for Literature, the American Studies Association Lifetime Achievement Award, and the Lambda Foundation’s Pioneer Award, among other honors. In 2017, she joined the faculty in the Department of English at the University of California Santa Barbara, where she also serves as the co-director of the Las Maestras Center for Xicana and Indigenous Thought, Art and Social Practice. Most recently, Moraga completed a commissioned screenplay entitled “Senora de los Blues” on the life of the genderbending Mexican ranchera singer, Chavela Vargas. From 1978 to 1980, Sally Gearhart served as Cherríe’s graduate advisor and mentor in feminist studies at San Francisco State University.

Ondine Rarey (she/her/hers) is a filmmaker, writer and editor. Her mockumentary A Portrait of Female Desperation was the recipient of six film festival awards. Her documentary Fools and Heroes was a Grimme-Preis nominee (the German equivalent of an Emmy) and aired on ARTE in France as well as stateside on PBS. She has edited over a dozen documentary features and shorts, including Who Will Tell Our History, Now en Español (for PBS) and, most recently, Rebel Hearts, directed by Pedro Kos and produced by Anchor Entertainment and Level 4. She has edited for multiple TV series, including Alien Encounters and Keeping Up With the Kardashians. She is also co-producer and editor on Sally, a feature documentary-in-progress. Ondine received a BA from the University of California Berkeley in history and a BFA in documentary and journalism from the Munich University for Television and Film in Germany. She currently resides in Los Angeles, where she teaches documentary editing at Chapman University.

HOW TO PARTICIPATE

This event will take place online. After you register, you will receive a confirmation email with a link and instructions on how to join.

ADMISSION

Free | $5 suggested donation

Tickets are available online here: https://bit.ly/3k7MhWT

ASL INTERPRETATION

ASL interpretation provided upon request. Please write at least three days in advance of event to leigh@glbthistory.org.

JOIN THE GLBT HISTORICAL SOCIETY

Become a member of the GLBT Historical Society for free museum and program admission, discounts in the museum shop and other perks: http://www.glbthistory.org/memberships.

View Event →
Oct
22
6:00 PM18:00

Author Talk | The Power of Language: Unpacking Diversity and Intersectionality in LGBTQ Culture

Headshot of Chloe O. Davis by James M. Avance.

EVENT DESCRIPTION

 Author Chloe Davis will discuss her new book The Queens’ English: The LGBTQIA+ Dictionary of Lingo and Colloquial Phrases (Clarkson Potter, 2021). Her talk will explore how language shapes culture; highlight the diverse communities and intersectional identities that make up our LGBTQ community; unpack the beautiful complexity of queer history; and foreground the importance of empowering, providing resources for, and making visible queer, gay, Black and trans identities.

Attendees who purchase copies of The Queens’ English from the GLBT Historical Society’s Bookshop.org page will receive a personalized autographed bookplate from Davis. Please send an email with your ticket confirmation and Bookshop.org receipt to leigh@glbthistory.org, with information on how you would like yours personalized, by October 25. For more information about The Queens’ English, see the publisher’s webpage here: https://www.thequeensenglishus.com/about.

SPEAKERS

 Chloe O. Davis (she/her/hers) is a proud Black bisexual woman and debut author who works in the entertainment industry in New York. A graduate of Hampton University and Temple University, she has centered her creative platform on amplifying the narratives of Black culture and heightening the awareness of the LGBTQ community. Davis’s work as a dancer, actor, and creative has allowed her to travel to all 50 states and internationally. In addition to performing at premier theaters across the country, such as New York City Center, the Apollo Theater, the Kennedy Center, the Muny, and the Berkeley Repertory Theatre, she has appeared on PBS’s Great Performances with Porgy and Bess at the Metropolitan Opera; Jesus Christ Superstar Live in Concert on NBC; and Southern Landscape performed by the Philadelphia Dance Company. In tandem with performing, Davis has spent 15 years researching, writing and creating The Queens’ English, The LGBTQIA+ Dictionary of Lingo and Colloquial Phrases. She believes this dictionary is a starting point for important conversations around inclusiveness, sexuality, gender expression and identity.

HOW TO PARTICIPATE

This event will take place online. After you register, you will receive a confirmation email with a link and instructions on how to join.

ADMISSION

Free | $5 suggested donation

Tickets are available online here: https://bit.ly/37XQB5x

ASL INTERPRETATION

ASL interpretation provided upon request. Please write at least three days in advance of event to leigh@glbthistory.org.

JOIN THE GLBT HISTORICAL SOCIETY

Become a member of the GLBT Historical Society for free museum and program admission, discounts in the museum shop and other perks: http://www.glbthistory.org/memberships.

View Event →
Oct
21
6:00 PM18:00

Gala | Reunion: The GLBT Historical Society 2021 Gala

Event Description

Hosted by Sister Roma and Juanita MORE!, the GLBT Historical Society’s annual Gala, “Reunion,” will be an evening of fabulous entertainment, inspiring presentations and a heartfelt celebration of LGBTQ history-makers. Due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, our Gala will again be virtual this year, with a live broadcast that attendees can watch from home. The proceeds directly support our mission of preserving and sharing LGBTQ history. More information is available at www.glbthistory.org/reunion.

HOW TO PARTICIPATE

This event will take place online. After you register, you will receive a confirmation email with a link and instructions on how to join.

ADMISSION

$75 suggested donation

Tickets are available online here: www.glbthistory.org/gala-tickets

ASL INTERPRETATION

This event will include live captions.

SPONSORS

Silver Sponsors

 

Bronze Sponsors

Randy Alfred

Cruisin’ the Castro Walking Tours

HomeLight

Maria Powers & Bobbi Marshall

Spectrum, LGBTQ+ Employee Network at Dolby Laboratories

Tito’s Handmade Vodka

JOIN THE GLBT HISTORICAL SOCIETY

Become a member of the GLBT Historical Society for free museum and program admission, discounts in the museum shop and other perks: http://www.glbthistory.org/memberships.

View Event →
Sep
16
6:00 PM18:00

Panel Discussion | Under the Rainbow: How History is Made

A segment from one of the two original rainbow flags created for San Francisco Gay Freedom Day 1978, donated to the GLBT Historical Society in April 2021; photograph by Matthew Leifheit, courtesy of the Gilbert Baker Foundation.

EVENT DESCRIPTION

From books and movies to museum exhibitions and art installations, we are continually interacting with objects from history. Many people are unfamiliar with the behind-the-scenes work that takes place to authenticate, contextualize and present a single object for display, work that can take months or even years. In this event, a panel of experts will focus on the original 1978 rainbow flag, a fragment of which was recently discovered and is now on display at the GLBT Historical Society Museum. Panelists will dive into the segment’s origins and long journey home, providing a look behind the curtain and under the rainbow in a program that considers how history is made, from discovery to display. The event will include a brief Q&A; guests are encouraged to submit questions in advance. Send questions to info@glbthistory.org with “Under the Rainbow event” in the subject line.

SPEAKERS

James (Jim) J. Ferrigan III (he/him/his) first became interested in flags as a Cub Scout growing up in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, after his father, a purchasing agent for the Bethlehem Steel Corporation, brought home some flags salvaged from a World War II-era ship being scrapped. In the 1970s he became a salesman with the Paramount Flag Company in San Francisco and was retail manager of its outlet on Polk Street, the Flag Store. He worked closely with the store’s window dresser, Gilbert Baker, and together they promulgated and promoted the rainbow flag for a decade and worked on many other displays. In the 1990s, Jim opened another flag store in Sonoma and played a pivotal role in the parade and celebrations organized for the sesquicentennial of the California state flag (the Bear Flag) in 1996. He is now a consulting vexillologist for museums, collectors, auction houses and governments and curates the largest private flag collection in the United States. He is the former vice president of the North American Vexillological Association and currently serves as its treasurer.

Eric Gonzaba (he/him/his) is an assistant professor of American Studies at California State University, Fullerton where he teaches courses on the history of race and sexuality in America. He received his Ph.D. in American history at George Mason University in 2019. His work has previously been supported by grants and fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Point Foundation, and the Elton John AIDS Foundation. Professor Gonzaba currently serves as co-chair of the Committee on LGBT History.

Melissa Leventon (she/her/hers), a founding partner of Curatrix Group museum consultants and appraisers, is a specialist in European and American costume and textiles. Formerly curator-in-charge of textiles at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, Melissa has also curated exhibitions involving media ranging from contemporary glass to the Dead Sea Scrolls. Local exhibitions include Somethin’s Happening Here: Bay Area Rock ’n’ Roll 1963–1973 at the Museum of Performance & Design and Artwear: Fashion and Anti-fashion at the California Palace of the Legion of Honor. She has contributed to many exhibition catalogues and journals and has also written four books. The latest, the exhibition catalogue Fit for a Queen: Her Majesty Queen Sirikit’s Creations by Balmain, was published in August 2016.

Andrew Shaffer (moderator, he/him/his) directs the GLBT Historical Society’s outreach, media and fundraising programs. Prior to joining the society, he led development efforts with multiple local nonprofits including the Immigrant Legal Resource Center and the California Preservation Foundation. He is also trained as a historian, and his academic background includes graduate work at the University of San Francisco and the University of Wisconsin, Madison, where he helped to build that city’s first permanent LGBTQ archives.

HOW TO PARTICIPATE

This event will take place online. After you register, you will receive a confirmation email with a link and instructions on how to join.

ADMISSION

Free | $5 suggested donation

Tickets are available online here: https://bit.ly/3zIKxd6

ASL INTERPRETATION

ASL interpretation provided upon request. Please write at least three days in advance of event to leigh@glbthistory.org.

JOIN THE GLBT HISTORICAL SOCIETY

Become a member of the GLBT Historical Society for free museum and program admission, discounts in the museum shop and other perks: http://www.glbthistory.org/memberships.

View Event →
Sep
9
7:00 PM19:00

Queer Culture Club | Catching Up With Mimi Demissew

Headshot of Mimi Demissew courtesy of same.

EVENT DESCRIPTION

We will interview Mimi Demissew, the recently appointed executive director of Our Family Coalition. Demissew has a extensive background in organizational development and strategic planning, having dedicated over two decades to sexual and gender-minority advocacy in the Washington, D.C. area. This is the September installment of “Queer Culture Club,” our monthly series each second Thursday that focuses on LGBTQ people who are defining the queer culture of yesterday, today and tomorrow. Each month, we interview queer culture-makers, including authors, playwrights, historians, activists, artists and archivists, to learn about their work, process, inspirations, hopes and dreams.

SPEAKERS

Mimi Demissew (she/her, they/them) is the executive director of Our Family Coalition. Prior to joining OFC, she helped launch a social entrepreneurship organization in 2008 and currently serves on its board. She also serves on the board of a smaller nonprofit focusing on education and family planning in Baltimore. She is passionate about aligning her professional skills with work organizations tat promote social equity and racial justice. A native of Virginia, Demissew was a longtime Baltimore resident and now lives in the East Bay.

HOW TO PARTICIPATE

This event will take place online. After you register, you will receive a confirmation email with a link and instructions on how to join.

ADMISSION

Free | $5 suggested donation

Tickets are available online here: https://bit.ly/2Ve2AsH

ASL INTERPRETATION

ASL interpretation provided upon request. Please write at least three days in advance of event to leigh@glbthistory.org.

JOIN THE GLBT HISTORICAL SOCIETY

Become a member of the GLBT Historical Society for free museum and program admission, discounts in the museum shop and other perks: http://www.glbthistory.org/memberships.

 

View Event →
Sep
3
6:00 PM18:00

Mighty Reels | Body and Soul: The Gay Games

Man and woman with medals on the field, 1986 Gay Games; six men embracing from the back, 1986 Gay Games; athletes at Opening Ceremony, 1986 Gay Games; all photographs by Robert Pruzan, Robert Pruzan collection (1998-36), GLBT Historical Society.

EVENT DESCRIPTION

Right off the heels of the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games, this installment in our program series “Mighty Reels” will focus on remarkable film footage from the first few gatherings of the Gay Games. This worldwide competition for LGBTQ athletes first took place in San Francisco in 1982. Patterned after the Olympics and now held every four years in a different city, the Games were originally called the Gay Olympics until a lawsuit filed by the International Olympic Committee just weeks before the event began forced a last-minute name change. In its early years, which overlapped with the worst years of the AIDS crisis, the Games’ mission of celebrating LGBTQ sports achievement and the queer body was especially vital. Today the Games remain a significant athletic and cultural event that provides queer athletes from around the world a joyous forum to excel.

Highlighting home movies, drag performances, amateur documentaries, and interviews with queer history-makers, “Mighty Reels” is a quarterly program series that provides an intimate look at the LGBTQ past straight from the camera lens. Each program in the series features a screening of footage from the archives, followed by a discussion with historians, community members and activists on the significance of these images.

SPEAKERS

Jim Provenzano (he/him) is the arts and nightlife editor with the Bay Area Reporter and has been a journalist in LGBTQ media for over three decades. He is the author of seven gay fiction novels, including Finding Tulsa, the 2012 Lambda Literary Award-winner Every Time I Think of You, and its sequel Message of Love  (a Lambda finalist). He received a BFA in Dance from Ohio State University and holds an MA in English/Creative Writing from San Francisco State University. The guest curator of the GLBT Historical Society exhibition Sporting Life, the world’s first LGBTQ athletics exhibition, he also wrote the award-winning syndicated “Sports Complex” column for ten years. 

HOW TO PARTICIPATE

This event will take place online. After you register, you will receive a confirmation email with a link and instructions on how to join.

ADMISSION

Free | $5 suggested donation

Tickets are available online here: https://bit.ly/3iT4mYc

ASL INTERPRETATION

ASL interpretation provided upon request. Please write at least three days in advance of event to leigh@glbthistory.org.

JOIN THE GLBT HISTORICAL SOCIETY

Become a member of the GLBT Historical Society for free museum and program admission, discounts in the museum shop and other perks: http://www.glbthistory.org/memberships.

View Event →
Aug
20
6:00 PM18:00

Author Talk | Affliction: Growing Up With a Closeted Gay Dad

Cover illustration of Affliction courtesy of Laura Hall. Headshot of Laura Hall courtesy of same.

EVENT DESCRIPTION

Author Laura Hall will discuss her new memoir, Affliction: Growing Up With a Closeted Gay Dad (She Writes Press, 2021) which recounts the life story of her gay father, Ralph, from 1918 to 2008. Hall was 24 when her father came out to her in 1975. She learned that in the late 1930s, her father had been in a relationship with a musician in Los Angeles. But two arrests for homosexual activity sent him back into the closet, prompted him to enlist in the Army and ultimately led him to marry a woman. With a panoramic sweep covering the conservative Central Valley oilfield culture of Ralph Hall’s youth, to his double life in postwar America, to his care for dying friends during the AIDS crisis, Affliction is a window into the life of a man who felt that he had no choice but to live in the shadows. The memoir also recounts how her father’s secret became a path to Hall’s own healing.

Attendees who purchase copies of Affliction: Growing Up with a Closeted Gay Dad from the GLBT Historical Society’s Bookshop.org page will receive a personalized autographed bookplate from Hall. Please send an email with your ticket confirmation and Bookshop.org receipt to leigh@glbthistory.org, with information on how you would like yours personalized, by August 23.

For more information about Affliction, see the publisher’s webpage here: https://shewritespress.com/product/affliction/.

SPEAKERS

Laura Hall (she/her/hers) was born and raised in a small city on the San Francisco peninsula. After receiving her BA and MA in landscape architecture at University of California at Berkeley, she went on to teach for the school’s Extension program and build an urban-design professional practice where her projects included community facilitation in Northern California communities and rebuilding plans for Mississippi Gulf Coast towns following the devastating effects of Hurricane Katrina in 2005. She currently works in EPA’s Region 9 Tribal, Intergovernmental, and Policy Division in San Francisco.

HOW TO PARTICIPATE

This event will take place online. After you register, you will receive a confirmation email with a link and instructions on how to join.

ADMISSION

$5 | Free for members

Tickets are available online here: https://bit.ly/3w8ahNH

ASL INTERPRETATION

ASL interpretation provided upon request. Please write at least three days in advance of event to leigh@glbthistory.org.

JOIN THE GLBT HISTORICAL SOCIETY

Become a member of the GLBT Historical Society for free museum and program admission, discounts in the museum shop and other perks: http://www.glbthistory.org/memberships

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