Category Archives: Gay history

Rainbow Elders Portrait Collection

{This week, we have a guest post from Calgary photographer Wilmer Aburto. In autumn 2023, Wilmer collaborated with the Rainbow Elders to capture portraits of members from our city’s 2SLGBTQIA+ communities. The portraits are dramatic and impactful, and we invited Wilmer to share his story. Enjoy – K.}

INSPIRATION

To honour 2SLGBTQIA+ elders and celebrate their remarkable resilience. The ‘Rainbow Elders Photographic Portrait Collection’ pays respect to Rainbow Elders Calgary, whose members identify as part of the Two-Spirit, Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer/Questioning, Intersex, and Asexual communities. Each has contributed significantly to building a richer community in Calgary.

The photo shoots took place at the historic Lois Szabo Commons, named after a pillar of Calgary’s queer community who opened the city’s first queer-run social space and has been active in Rainbow Elders Calgary for years. Some portraits were also captured at the Calgary Board of Education Building.

Wilmer invited makeup artists Josee ‘La Güita’ Palacio and Subliminal Rabbit to create unique looks for each of the seven participants. The artists incorporated each person’s favourite colours and themes into their overall appearance. Once makeup and wardrobe were finalized, each participant was photographed.

Rainbow Elders and the Creative Team, October 2023

Wilmer was inspired by Vincent Cianni’s groundbreaking work documenting the experiences of 2SLGBTQ+ individuals in the US military. Cianni, who has been a long-distance mentor to Wilmer in previous collections, paved the way for capturing the stories of marginalized communities. His influential book, “Gays In The Military: Photographs And Interviews,” motivated Wilmer to shed light on the lives of 2SLGBTQ+ elders in Calgary, continuing the tradition of using photography to reveal hidden narratives and contribute to the broader historical record of 2SLGBTQ+ experiences.

Building on this foundation, Wilmer hopes to bring to Calgary more stories of seniors who are members of the 2SLGBTQ+ community, further expanding the scope of these important narratives and deepening our understanding of their unique experiences.

EXHIBITION

For Wilmer, it was paramount that these powerful portraits be reproduced on an imposing scale, allowing viewers to fully immerse themselves in the subjects’ experiences and emotions.

The collection made its inaugural appearance at The Grand during Calgary Pride’s Alphabet Mafia event in August 2024. The photographs were displayed in a striking 4 feet by 5.5 feet format, towering over attendees and commanding attention.

The monumental size of these prints not only honoured the subjects, many of whom were present at the event, but also symbolized the larger-than-life impact these individuals have had on their communities, as hundreds of guests gathered to pay tribute to their legacy and contributions.

ABOUT THE ARTIST

Wilmer Aburto Self Portrait

Wilmer Aburto is a Mohkinstsis (Calgary) based photographer born in Nicaragua. He is passionate about using art for social advocacy. Recently, Wilmer travelled to Nicaragua to facilitate art projects supporting youth in impoverished areas. He also gave artist talks and workshops for education providers, collaborating with organizations initiating, supporting, and promoting cultural projects in Nicaragua and Central America.

Wilmer has exhibited his photography at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago. His work was featured on the cover of Freq magazine and selected for the Italian publication Imago Mundi, which was exhibited alongside the Venice Biennale. He has received several awards for Leadership, Inclusivity, Community Partnership, and Arts Culture.

You can find Wilmer on Instagram: @wilmerphotography

“I hope these portraits remind us to centre the voices of Calgary’s 2SLGBTQIA+ elders, so that we can learn from their experience and knowledge.”

{WA}

YYC Pride Roundup

Phew. Queer history was popular during Calgary Pride 2024!

The Calgary Gay History Project was featured in The Scene (twice) and on CityTV. A couple of podcasts dropped featuring interviews with Kevin Allen: Late in ’88 and Passing Time With Craig.

To round things out, we hosted gay history walks, a book signing at the Pride Festival, and Pride at Shelf Life Books, which featured history, poetry, and drag.

Pride at Shelf Life Books: Kevin Allen, Dogiichow, Osmo Cis, Skylar Kay and Bret Crowle on Sept 4, 2024.

If you missed the sold-out Involve: Stonewall & Carousel event last year, Lawrence Interior Design, just released a video which documents the conversation between Jason Brooks, Martin Boyce and Lois Szabo.

Martin Boyce and Lois Szabo in conversation at Involve: Stonewall & Carousel

Finally, until September 23rd, catch the pop-up exhibition about the LGBT Purge at the Central Library. The Canadian government investigated thousands of 2SLGBTQI+ employees, military personnel, and members of the RCMP during the Cold War. Many of these employees and personnel were forced to resign, ruining lives and careers. But they fought back, and survivors won a major class action lawsuit against the government in 2018. The exhibition “Love in a Dangerous Time” is an appetizer for the Canadian Museum of Human Rights’s large-scale museum show in Winnipeg next year.

David Robert Van Norman forced to resign from the RCMP after being labelled homosexual in 1964. Photo: Elenore Sturko.

{KA}

The YYCGayHistory Collection Launches

It is with delight, wonderment, and gratitude that we announce the launch of the Calgary Gay History Project Collection at the University of Calgary Archives.

Image by Andy Nichols, 2024, University of Calgary Archives Photographs, Libraries and Cultural Resources.

This now publicly accessible collection consists of published material, photographs, audiovisual material, ephemera, and other material related to the Calgary Gay History Project. This includes magazines, business directories and informational brochures, material from sporting events such as Western Cup, Outgames, and gay rodeos, show logs and audio recordings of radio shows, material from theatrical events such as Fairy Tales Film Festival and Third Street Theatre performances, as well as other 2SLGBTQ+ issues and concerns.

Dr. William Bridel, Archivist Kim Geraldi, and the Calgary Gay History Project’s Kevin Allen exploring the collection. Image by Andy Nichols, 2024.

The collection has been gathered from many community organizations and donors, including: Calgary Outlink, Calgary Pride, Kevin Allen, Stevie Lee Anderson, Jonathan Brower, Kelly Ernst, Matt Gillespie, Richard Gregory, Robert Lawrence, Terry MacKenzie and Kenneth Peach, Neil McMullen, Nancy Miller, Judy Moore, Pam Rocker, Gene Rodman, Joey Sayer, Michael Wright, and several anonymous donors.

Pride Flag with historic buttons donated by Richard Gregory. Image by Andy Nichols, 2024.

We thank all the donors to the collection who entrusted us with their materials over the past decade. We are grateful to Dr. William Bridel, a professor at the U of C (and queer historian himself) who facilitated the transfer of materials from Kevin Allen’s overloaded condo to the University. Finally, we thank archivist Kim Geraldi, who handled our collection so enthusiastically and tenderly.

William, Kevin and Kim looking at early Fairy Tales Film Festival Posters. Image by Andy Nichols, 2024.

A launch party for the Calgary Gay History Project collection is tentatively being planned for October. Our Past Matters—now future generations of researchers can explore queer Calgary’s storied past!

{KA}