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Pride & Joy: Taking the Streets of New York City PDF

193 Pages·2016·17.31 MB·English
by  WajdowiczJ
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FOLD FOLD FOLD FOLD Other Books in This Series PHOTOGRAPHY / GAY AND LESBIAN STUDIES $21.95 U.S. Five Bells: Being LGBT in Australia Pride&JJooyy “captures the five-alarm sensory blast that Jenny Papalexandris is the nyc Gay Pride march.” —Kate Clinton Lyudmila and Natasha: Russian Lives Misha Friedman More than forty years have passed since members of the Taking the Streets of New York City LGBT community took to the streets of New York City on the Bordered Lives: Transgender Portraits from Mexico first anniversary of the Stonewall riots, for the world’s first Kike Arnal P march for gay rights. From its modest beginnings, the annual r i event has grown into an all-encompassing celebration of d e queer culture, drawing more than a million people from all & “I had just moved to the city after graduating from college. J over the world to the streets of New York each June. It was really transformative for me, at age twenty, to be in o With an introduction by satirist and activist Kate Clinton y that huge crowd of gay people. In everyday life my queerness, | and published in the wake of the historic U.S. Supreme Court J or at least my outness, had become an issue. Looking for a u decision on same-sex marriage, Pride & Joy is an ode to what r job, walking down the street, being with my family, there e k is now a New York institution—a true photographic celebration was always some degree of tension and friction because of W that captures the spirit of this remarkable gay pride event. my difference. But here among the marchers, there was no a j Energetic, colorful, and irreverent, these vivid images are a d difference.”—AliSOn Bechdel ow playful and moving affirmation of equality. Noted photographer ic Jurek Wajdowicz journeys deep into the heart of the march, “I first marched, in 1973, as an act of political assertion. We z offering portraits of marchers, bystanders, and leading figures were marching in defiance of the pressures to remain invisible, in the LGBT community, images that revel in the rich diversity of the fears we all carried with us about coming out into the of the parade. Exquisitely presented, the book includes open. That first march was so exhilarating that I knew I would interviews with members of the queer community about their keep doing it. I kept marching for the sense of collective relationship to the march, chronicling a startling variety of power and pride that the march provided.” —JOhn d’emiliO responses to this integral part of New York life. “I marched for women who needed no one to march, or The fourth in a major new series of LGBT-themed do much of anything, for them. They did for themselves. photography books, Pride & Joy is a visual treat for I marched to meet and mourn and resurrect the parts of photography lovers, an inspiration for the global queer myself I keep cooped up or quiet. I marched to practice community, and a singular tribute to New York City. stepping off my safe, private place on the pavement and into the mad helter-skelter crush in the street. I marched to be reminded that there is joy there, in the mix of singular, special Jurek Wajdowicz is a Polish-born American artist, fine people in a common crowd, dancing differently together.” art photographer, and internationally known graphic designer. —lAurA FlAnderS He lives and works in New York City. Together with Lisa LaRochelle, he is principal of the award-winning design “Harvey Milk encouraged generations of Americans to ‘come firm Emerson, Wajdowicz Studios (EWS). EWS’s partners out’ and demand our full dignity and equality. There is and clients include foremost international humanitarian probably no event that is more in the spirit of Milk’s exhorta- organizations and nonprofit institutions active in social tions than the Pride March: folks from all walks of life—gay change. Wajdowicz is acknowledged as one of the leading and straight—expressing their fundamental belief that we graphic designers known for his photojournalistic creative each have a right to live with dignity regardless of whom approach to design. In recent years, he has also focused we love.” —AnThOny rOmerO his attention on fine art abstract photography. His art photography book, Liminal Spaces, was published in 2013. Wajdowicz’s solo art photography exhibition Solace was presented by the Kasia Michalski Gallery in 2015. His work is included in permanent collections of museums in the Jurek Wajdowicz United States, Germany, Poland, and Switzerland. with an introduction by Kate clinton is a nationally known humorist, activist, and Kate Clinton award-winning writer specializing in political commentary www.thenewpress.com from a gay/lesbian point of view. She is the author of several Cover photographs © by Jurek Wajdowicz books, including Don’t Get Me Started, What the L?, and Cover design by Emerson, Wajdowicz Studios (EWS) I Told You So. Clinton lives in New York City. FOLD FOLD FOLD FOLD STR/107_PRIDE&JOYcover_Final_0318.indd 1 3/24/16 6:00 PM Pride&Joy Pride&Joy Taking the Streets of New York City Jurek Wajdowicz THE NEW PRESS © 2016 by Jurek Wajdowicz Preface © 2016 by Jon Stryker Introduction © 2016 by Kate Clinton All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, in any form, without written permission from the publisher. Requests for permission to reproduce selections from this book should be mailed to: Permissions Department, The New Press, 120 Wall Street, 31st floor, New York, NY 10005. Published in the United States by The New Press, New York, 2016 Distributed by Perseus Distribution ISBN 978-1-62097-185-7 (pbk) ISBN 978-1-62097-206-9 (e-book) CIP data available The New Press publishes books that promote and enrich public discussion and understanding of the issues vital to our democracy and to a more equitable world. These books are made possible by the enthusiasm of our readers; the support of a committed group of donors, large and small; the col- laboration of our many partners in the independent media and the not-for-profit sector; booksellers, who often hand-sell New Press books; librarians; and above all by our authors. www.thenewpress.com Book design and composition © 2016 by Emerson, Wajdowicz Studios (EWS) This book was set in Helvetica Inserat, Helvetica Neue, Franklin Gothic and News Gothic Printed in the United States of America 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Preface JON STRYKER The photographs in this book and others in this series are part of a larger collective body of commissioned work by some of the world’s most gifted contemporary photojournalists. The project was born out of conversations that I had with Jurek Wajdowicz. He is an accomplished art photographer and frequent collaborator of mine, and I am a lover of and collector of photography. I owe a great debt to Jurek and his design partner, Lisa LaRochelle, in bringing this book series to life. Both Jurek and I have been extremely active in social justice causes—I as an activist and philanthropist and he as a creative collaborator with some of the household names in social change. Together we set out with an ambitious goal to explore and illuminate the most intimate and personal dimensions of self, still too often treated as taboo: gen- der identity and expression, and sexual orientation. These books continue to reveal the amazing multiplicity in these core aspects of our being, played out against a vast array of distinct and varied cultures and customs from around the world. Photography is a powerful medium for communication that can transform our under- standing and awareness of the world we live in. We believe the photographs in this series will forever alter our perceptions of the arbitrary boundaries that we draw between others and ourselves and, at the same time, delight us with the broad spectrum of possibility for how we live our lives and love one another. I am particularly happy seeing Jurek’s Pride & Joy come to life. For this book he is not only the artistic director, but also the photographer. He, and the other photographers in this ongoing series, are more than craftsmen: They are communicators, translators, and facilitators of the kind of exchange that we hope will eventually allow all the world’s people to live in greater harmony. n Jon Stryker, philanthropist, architect, and photography devotee, is the founder and board president of the Arcus Foundation, a global foundation promoting respect for diversity among peoples and in nature. ● 5 Introduction KATE CLINTON Stepping off the curb into the New York City SAGE, TransPride, International Pride, LGBT Pride Parade has the exhilarating, familiar employee groups, the Imperial Court, the rush of “Here we go!” Supreme Court decisions, the fireworks, the dance on the pier, the next day’s mandatory All the decisions behind that brunch recap. day’s first step: All of these somehow crystallize into one The outfit, the layering, the shoes, the glorious, joyous, outrageous, sexy, sweaty, snacks, the hydration, the ID, the SPF, the present moment—as small and beautiful as phone calls, the texts, the plans to meet, the a glittered nipple and as large and beautiful affinity group, the banner, the slogans, the as the rainbow flag rippling down the canyon glitter, the makeup, the precision dance-step of Fifth Avenue. practice, the post-parade plans. The decision to come out of the closet is All the politics of the parade: a very private moment. Each lesbian, gay, The organizing, the meetings, the fund- bisexual, and transgender person faces it. raising, the infighting, the committees, the No confetti, no thumping bass, no cheering subcommittees, the sub-sub-subcommittees, people. Those who have come out know the the ordering of the rainbow-balloon arch subtle shift forward, the first step out of the and port-o-johns, navigating the labyrinthine closet, then the wild, liberating, headlong city departments, the noise ordinances, rush of “Here we go!” the parade security, the registration, the The Pride Parade celebrates and inspires that volunteer lawyers, the corporate sponsors, moment and that movement every year. the politicians, the reviewing stand, the selection of grand marshals, the marshaling Stepping off the curb, off the sidelines, of volunteers, the cleanup. into a community. All the history of the parade: Here we go!: The Stonewall riots, the Homophile Society, Rumors of a parade of those who have the parade on the first anniversary of the come out, news stories, and police reports, riots, the first years of visibility, the growing spur others to join the masses. numbers, the numbers disputed by the Marchers with bags on their heads media, the party, the disco beat, the AIDS now posting sweaty selfies. protests, the moment of silence, the chants, the signage, the protesters, the spectators, Chanting, chatting, waving, smiling. the sirens, the Big Apple Marching Band, PFLAG, the Center kids, the leather contingent, Lavender Light Gospel Choir, the LGBT veterans, the veteran LGBT elders, 6 ● ● 7 8 ● ● 9

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