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Out West: Gay and Lesbian Artists in the Southwest 1900-1969

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Silver gelatin print of Hal Bynner

Out West surveys the work of gay and lesbian artists in the American Southwest from the early twentieth century through the Stonewall Riots of 1969, when the face of queer representation changed dramatically in the United States. While some artists built lives for themselves in states less welcoming to queer people, other areas, including northern New Mexico promised freedom and a sense of community denied to them elsewhere. Queer communities played a significant role in developing the art communities throughout this region, although this influence is rarely acknowledged. Yet even in the most open communities, the impact of these early queer artists has yet to be fully recognized. In his engaging memoir Unbuttoned: Gay Life in the Santa Fe Art Scene, Walter Cooper laments: “So much of our queer history has been swept under the rug, it’s almost as if we never existed. People tend to underrate or ignore ‘the queer factor,’ the enormous impact gay folk have made on New Mexico’s unique cultural life.”

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Deer Dance
Agnes C. Sims
circa 1945
Deer Dance
Agnes C. Sims
circa 1945
Deer Dance
Agnes C. Sims
circa 1945
Deer Dance
Agnes C. Sims
circa 1945
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