LATEST LGBTQ NEWS
Tag Warner becomes Chair of GT Group after 7-year CEO tenure. Solomon Thomson leads Gay Times while company announces suite of new Board appointments. more
Jedet gana el juicio por la agresión sexual sufrida en los Premios Feroz more
El Archivo Arkhé inaugura Ruina, obra que reivindica la memoria a través de la figura de Lorca more
Estas películas LGTBIQA+ se estrenarán próximamente en Filmin more
Troye Sivan gets candid on body image in response to a viral TikTok dissecting his looks more
Queer Eye: Here’s the alleged reason Karamo Brown had a falling out with his co-stars more
“I’m actually fuming!”: Fans react to the Oscars snubbing Wicked: For Good more
Kesha sends support to Kim Petras amid record label dispute: “I hear you” more
RWRB star Nicholas Galitzine goes full He-Man in trailer, debuting dramatic muscle transformation more
Heated Rivalry stars Hudson Williams and Connor Storrie to carry the Olympic torch more





UK LGBT EVENTS - Tate Britain: Queer British Art 1861-1967
< Return to events listings
01 - 01
Tate Britain: Queer British Art 1861-1967

Presenting the first exhibition dedicated to queer British art Featuring works from 18611967 relating to lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans and queer (LGBTQ) identities, the show marks the 50th anniversary of the partial decriminalisation of male homosexuality in England. Queer British Art explores how artists expressed themselves in a time when established assumptions about gender and sexuality were being questioned and transformed. Deeply personal and intimate works are presented alongside pieces aimed at a wider public, which helped to forge a sense of community when modern terminology of lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans were unrecognised. Together, they reveal a remarkable range of identities and stories, from the playful to the political and from the erotic to the domestic. With paintings, drawings, personal photographs and film from artists such as John Singer Sargent, Dora Carrington, Duncan Grant and David Hockney the diversity of queer British art is celebrated as never before. Why is the word 'queer' used in the exhibition title? Queer has a mixed history from the 19th century onwards it has been used both as a term of abuse and as a term by LGBT people to refer to themselves. Our inspiration for using it came from Derek Jarman who said that it used to frighten him but now 'for me to use the word queer is a liberation'. More recently, of course, it has become reclaimed as a fluid term for people of different sexualities and gender identities. Historians of sexuality have also argued that it is preferable to other terms for sexualities in the past as these often don't map onto modern sexual identites. In addition to carrying out audience research, we took advice from Stonewall and other LGBT charities and held focus groups with LGBT people. The advice from all of these sources was overwhelmingly that we should use it. While we tried other titles, no other option captured the full diversity of sexualities and gender identities that are represented in the show. Text provided by Clare Barlow, curator of Queer British Art.

Tickets : £ Free/16 Tickets

Address : Tate Britain
Millbank
London
SW1P 4RG

Telephone : 020 7887 8888

Website : Click Here

SUBSCRIBE TO VELVET-CLUB

Enter your email address below to receive details about our Velvet-Club: Member & Subscriber Events, LGBT UK Monthly Events Guides/Newsletters, Competitions & Special Offers.

STAR SIGNS
HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO YOU...
  • 01 Jan – Martine Rothblatt (1954–), American lawyer, author, entrepreneur, business executive, & CEO of United Therapeutics
  • 02 Jan – M. Carey Thomas (1857–1935), American educator, linguist & women's suffragist
  • 04 Jan – Dot Jones (1964–), American actress & arm wrestler
  • 06 Jan – Simone de Beauvoir (1908–1986), French writer, philosopher & activist
  • 06 Jan – Kate McKinnon (1984–), American actress & comedian
  • 06 Jan – Nancy Ruth (1942–), Canadian Senator
  • 08 Jan – Winnaretta Singer (1865–1943), American heiress
  • 11 Jan – Eva Le Gallienne (1899–1991), English actress, producer & director
  • 12 Jan – Edith Cooper (1862–1913), English poet
  • 12 Jan – Patsy Kelly (1910–1981), American actress
  • 13 Jan – Charlotte Charke (1713–1760), English actress, playwright, novelist & transvestite
  • 14 Jan – Holland Taylor (1943–), American actress
  • 19 Jan – Patricia Highsmith (1921–1995), American novelist & short-story writer
  • 19 Jan – Janis Joplin (1943–1970), American rock singer-songwriter
  • 22 Jan – Elaine Noble (1944–), American politician & LGBT activist
  • 23 Jan – Luisa, Marquise Casati Stampa di Soncino (1881–1957), Italian aristocrat, muse & patron of the arts
  • 25 Jan – Virginia Woolf (1882–1941), English writer
  • 25 Jan – Aya Kamikawa (1968–), Japanese politician & writer, first openly transgender politician in Japan
  • 26 Jan – Ellen DeGeneres (1958–), American actress & stand-up comedian
  • 28 Jan – Colette (1873–1954), French novelist
  • 28 Jan – Marnie McBean (1968–), Canadian rower, three-time Olympic Gold Medalist
  • 29 Jan – Gia Carangi (1960–1986), American model
  • 29 Jan – Sara Gilbert (1975–), American actress & talk show co-host
  • 31 Jan – Tallulah Bankhead (1902–1968), American actress
  • 31 Jan – Portia de Rossi (1973–), Australian actress
  • 31 Jan – Patricia Velásquez (1971–), Venezuelan actress & model

BUSINESS