12 Jul - 14 Jul
10am to 6pm
Free
Accessibility
Accessible toilets, Wheelchair accessible, Step free access.
Gender neutral toilets
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Picturing Nonconformity: LGBT Humanist Heritage Exhibition
- Exhibition and Tours
- Community
Upcoming Dates
Fri, 12 Jul
10:00 - 18:00
Sat, 13 Jul
10:00 - 18:00
Sun, 14 Jul
10:00 - 18:00
This landmark exhibition celebrates LGBT Humanists, complementing their archival ephemera with illustrations by LGBT artists’ of inspirational nonconforming figures from further back in history.
Through photographs, oral histories, newspapers and ephemera of all kinds, the LGBT Humanists archive tells a story of political struggles and community building since 1979. Amid campaigns on topics such as blasphemy, marriage, and conversion therapy, inclusive spaces emerged for social activities and creative expression, through both events and the circulation of ephemera by LGBT Humanists (first known as the Gay Humanist Group).
In this exhibition, we honour LGBT Humanists as a pioneering organisation that established places for the non-religious to freely express their gender and sexuality. Expect protest imagery, snapshots of lively group gatherings, testimonies from LGBT Humanists members, as well as equally amusing and inspiring articles and illustrations from the community’s newsletter. This specially curated collection, ranging from textiles to illustrations to photographs, will feature works from EM Parry, SL Grange, River Manning, Alice Gabb and Claire Mead.
In the current climate of false narratives surrounding the supposed modernity of LGBT communities and activism, this project is a timely showcase of long humanitarian histories. Connections will be drawn between, for example, the work of Humanists UK today to campaign against conversion therapy, the Gay News trial that spurred the foundation of LGBT Humanists, and the Molly House proprietors who defended their customers against religiously-motivated homophobic persecution in eighteenth-century London.
Target Audience Groups
16+
Accessibility
The exhibition space is fully accessible from street level. There is a shallow ramp leading from the exhibition to the accessible toilet.