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Fine Art - Harmony Hammond: Making as resistance, abstraction as survival
Week 4 of A Year with Queer Women’s Art, Film, and Music Harmony Hammond has spent her career doing something deceptively simple: making work anyway. Long before queer art was welcomed by institutions—or even named safely—Hammond was building a visual language rooted in feminism, materiality, and refusal. Her work doesn’t announce itself loudly, but it doesn’t yield either. Hammond emerged from the feminist art movement of the 1970s, but her practice quickly moved beyond cate
Lisa Smith
Jan 312 min read
Fine Art - Mickalene Thomas: Desire, power, and the right to take up space
Week 3 of A Year with Queer Women’s Art, Film, and Music Mickalene Thomas makes work that refuses to shrink. Her paintings, collages, and installations are lush, saturated, and unapologetically bold. They glitter—sometimes literally—but the surface beauty is never the point on its own. Thomas uses excess with intention. She understands adornment as power. Her work centers Black women—often queer women—in poses that recall art history while firmly rejecting its exclusions. Rec
Lisa Smith
Jan 242 min read
Fine Art - Catherine Opie: Looking honestly, without asking permission
Week 2 of A Year with Queer Women’s Art, Film, and Music Catherine Opie makes work that doesn’t rush you. Her photographs ask for time, and they reward it. Like Fiona Apple’s The Idler Wheel…, Opie’s practice is about staying with things that are often smoothed over—identity, intimacy, discomfort, domesticity—and refusing to tidy them up for someone else’s ease. Opie emerged in the early 1990s, at a moment when queer communities were under intense pressure: politically, medic
Lisa Smith
Jan 172 min read


Fine Art - Zanele Muholi: Witness, lineage, and the right to be seen
Week 1 of A Year with Queer Women’s Art, Film, and Music Zanele Muholi describes their work as visual activism, but that framing almost undersells what’s happening. Muholi’s photographs don’t argue for visibility so much as they practice it. They document Black queer and trans lives with care, intention, and insistence—creating an archive where one did not reliably exist before. There is a steadiness to Muholi’s work that feels grounding. The portraits are direct. Subjects me
Lisa Smith
Jan 102 min read
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