Lord iron gay artist

Lord Spencer Speaks

A Grandee Visits a Grande Dame

Spencer Compton explores the celebrated Carolina Apartments

Illustration by Romey Petite

When I was in limited breeches, my most elegant mother, Mary Noel, liked to bend an aged saying: “Curiosity skills the cat,” she would say, encouraging me to travel the world around me, even if I soiled my silken blouse or bloodied my engaged knees.

Indeed, I developed a hunger for how things serve and connect, from the Archimedes screw pump that filled the moat around our Compton Wynyates estate to who was screwing whom in the top reaches of British government.

While my contemporaries in Parliament considered I, Lord Wilmington, to be a dullard and a fop, many of the realm’s deepest secrets and machinations were at my polished fingertips. (Which is why I became prime minister of Great Britain in ) My lifelong inquisitiveness (some spelled it meddling) has served me well in my current explorations of this city, named for me by my protege, Royal Gov. Gabriel Johnston, once the grandest man in this land.

Which is why I recently establish

When Keith Haring turned a men's room into art

On the anniversary of the artist’s birth, we view back on his site-specific work Once Upon a Time

For most people, doodling on a toilet wall might result in a minor fine, rather a minor work of fine art. Yet for Keith Haring - who was born on this day 4 May in - things were a little different. Though this US artist was used to making unsanctioned works in public places, his site-specific work, Once Upon a Time, was actually commissioned for the men’s room at New York’s Lesbian and Gay Collective Services Center, in remembrance of the Stonewall Riots. Haring, rather sombrely analyzing this important moment in the sexual revolution of the s, indulged in a joyous orgy of poppy, gay, expressionism. Here’s how Richard Meyer takes up the story in our book, Art & Queer Culture.

 

Once Upon A Time () by Keith Haring. Photo by Alex Galyon, via Flickr. Innovative Commons license

“Beginning in , Keith Haring made illicit chalk drawings on the blank panels of unsold advertising space in Novel York City subway stations. His

"Revolution only needs good dreamers who remember their dreams."
—Tennessee Williams, Camino Real

Although the first Pride events in brought queer activists and allies together to march as a potent symbol of representation and resistance one year after the Stonewall Uprising, the quest for equality and the acceptance of sexual minorities began about one hundred years earlier in Europe. Karl Heinrich Ulrichs, a German activist considered to be the first openly homosexual guy, began a difficult and widespread campaign in the s to reverse the criminalization of lesbian acts included in the Prussian penal code. The focus to his argument: Ulrichs considered his condition of same-sex attraction to be inborn, and therefore deserving of respect and not persecution. Although Ulrichs's campaign failed to overturn the legislation, it forged an important connection between homosexuals and the medical community, which, through the work of sexologists such as Magnus Hirschfeld and Alfred Kinsey, brought much-needed insights into the natural state of homosexuality, a fundamenta

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Would you happen to recognize of any artists with the same style as Julius, but with exclusively men?

Hmmm, where to start Assuming you’ve already explored the classics like Tom of Finland, Etienne, Beau, Harry Bush and Craig Esposito, there’s always the work of Michael Broderick (aka Hottlead), Lord Iron and Josman. And of course, my bro @grahamgroans (who’s illustrated several of my stories, including the next one) as adequately as the crazy talented Celery Man (@celeryman6 on Twitter). If you like the bara style, you can’t go past Mentaiko.

Anybody else have some fine recommendations? I’m always on the lookout for unused artists too

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"Seamus" - artwork from Celery Bloke on Twitter. (@CeleryMan6)

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