Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,800,756 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Snapshots of queer youth: a photography exhibit of candid portraits of gay and lesbian young people lives up to its name: "Exuberance!" (art).


Benjie Nycum and Mike Glatze will never forget the words their young gay friend Graham said as he lay in bed slowly dying of diabetes: "I think I personify per·son·i·fy  
tr.v. per·son·i·fied, per·son·i·fy·ing, per·son·i·fies
1. To think of or represent (an inanimate object or abstraction) as having personality or the qualities, thoughts, or movements of a living being:
 the word exuberance." And they hope America won't be able to forget those words either.

Activist-photographers Glatze and Nycum, along with photographer Rachelle Lee Smith (whose work debuted in The Advocate in 2002 and is not included here), have created a showcase of American youth that they say embodies the same zeal for life their young friend once had. Called "Exuberance!" it features more than 300 5-by-5 framed photographs of gay, lesbian, bisexual bisexual /bi·sex·u·al/ (-sek´shoo-al)
1. pertaining to or characterized by bisexuality.

2. an individual exhibiting bisexuality.

3. pertaining to or characterized by hermaphroditism.

4.
, and transgendered transgendered adjective Relating to a person who has undergone genital/sexual reassignment surgery Transgender health issues Hormonal therapy, cosmetic surgery, fertility options–eg, egg and sperm banking. See Sexual reassignment. Cf Transsexual.  U.S. and Canadian youth. Having premiered in July 2002 in Halifax, Canada, the exhibit is set to make its official U.S. debut April 25 at the Sol Mednick Gallery and Gallery 1401 at the University of the Arts University of the Arts may refer to:
  • University of the Arts Bremen in Bremen, Germany
  • University of the Arts London in London, England
  • University of the Arts in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
 in Philadelphia, sponsored in part by the annual global GLBT-rights symposium Equality Forum, which convenes April 28.

"We realized the whole group of gay and lesbian youth personify exuberance in so many ways," Glatze says. "For example, [gays and lesbians] all have had to deal with struggles of coming out and have risen above them--it's an exuberant exuberant /ex·u·ber·ant/ (eg-zoo´ber-ant) copious or excessive in production; showing excessive proliferation.

ex·u·ber·ant
adj.
Proliferating or growing excessively.
 state of being."

Since 2001 Nycum and Glatze have been regularly traversing North America North America, third largest continent (1990 est. pop. 365,000,000), c.9,400,000 sq mi (24,346,000 sq km), the northern of the two continents of the Western Hemisphere.  by car, stopping at cities and small towns along the way to interview and photograph queer youth for their activist Web site, Young Gay America. It took them four trips to collect the more than 1,000 stories and 6,000 photographs from which the show has been culled. Nycum says he has "a mission to put queer youth out in the media" and adds that the current youth movement wouldn't have been possible just a decade ago.

It's a point vividly illustrated by 15-year-old David from Lebanon, Pa., whose portrait with his mother appears in the exhibition. "To me, the words faggot, homosexual, and queer aren't negative at all," he says. "Some people may look down on gay people for whatever reason ... but that's them."

Glatze says the media often downplay down·play  
tr.v. down·played, down·play·ing, down·plays
To minimize the significance of; play down: downplayed the bad news.

Verb 1.
 the strengths of gay youth in favor of reporting on their troubles, an emphasis he hopes the exhibit will counterbalance. "How often does the mainstream media talk about how resilient these kids are to overcome their problems and difficulties and [how they] might be well-equipped to be future leaders Future Leaders is a UK schools-led charitable organisation that aims to widen the pool of talented leaders especially for urban challenging secondary schools. It was founded in March 2006 by Nat Wei, a former founder of Teach First. ?"

Some of the young people featured in the exhibition are already leaders in their communities. Liz from Pueblo, Colo., helped to create her hometown's annual pride event when she was just 16. "I just don't think anyone had got around to doing it," she says. "But then we realized, `Why not? Why couldn't we do it?' No one else was. So we did it."

That's exuberance.
COPYRIGHT 2003 Liberation Publications, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Koland, Trent J.
Publication:The Advocate (The national gay & lesbian newsmagazine)
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Apr 15, 2003
Words:462
Previous Article:Canyonn cooler: High Art director Lisa Cholodenko talks about avoiding sophomore slump with her sexy, sunny comedy Laurel Canyon. (film).(Interview)
Next Article:All-American girl: Madonna's latest CD makes a fascinating exploration of her own complicated American Life.(Sound Recording Review)
Topics:



Related Articles
School's out.(gay youth)
Prevalence of Unprotected Sex and HIV-Antibody Testing Among Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual Youth.(Statistical Data Included)
The young and the restless: while lesbian and gay youth may have more support than ever before, the first step in claiming their rights gets no...
Portraits of a revolution: photographer Rachelle Lee Smith gives lesbian and gay youth an outlet to speak for themselves. (art).(Brief Article)
A lack of role models.(Generation Q)(author comments on lack of interaction between youth and adults in gay community)(Brief Article)
Young, gay, and OK: cultural shifts and supportive parents are leading gay youths to come out earlier, some before their teens.(Youth)
Look out, word here we come! Today's young gay leaders represent the largest cultural shift in a generation. Here are six high achievers who aren't...
Youth scrapbook on film.(Brief Article)
Kicked out? Drop in.(GENQ)
A Thousand Words.(Brief article)(Book review)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2010 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles