15 Feb 2019
Bush Staff Recommends: LGBT+ Artists
- Our People
- The Bigger Picture
February is an exciting time for reflection on all things LGBT+ as we celebrate communities past and present. Heterosexist society has meant that the great contributions of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Asexual, Non-Binary and Intersex individuals have been systematically down-played, or entirely erased. LGBT+ History Month is a fantastic opportunity to combat this, sparking discussion and opening powerful conversations.
With the celebrations in full swing, the Bush Staff seized the opportunity to share with you our favourite queer artists.
I Extend My Arms, by Claude Cahun
Photography
I’ve always loved this artwork, and have never quite been sure why. It just feels very true to a mood/state of being I’ve sometimes found myself in.
Read more about the piece on the Tate Modern Website here.
Bea Burrows, Head of Marketing
Having A Coke with You?, by Frank O’Hara
Poetry

Hear the work read by the writer here.
Deirdre O’Halloran, Associate Dramaturg
The Internet
Band
Ifrah Ismail, Literary Assistant
Postcard from Kashmir, by Agha Shahid Ali
Poetry
“Kashmir shrinks into my mailbox,
my home a neat four by six inches.I always loved neatness. Now I hold
the half-inch Himalayas in my hand.
This is home. And this the closest
I’ll ever be to home. When I return,
the colors won’t be so brilliant,
the Jhelum’s waters so clean,
so ultramarine. My love
so overexposed.
And my memory will be a little
out of focus, in it
a giant negative, black
and white, still undeveloped.”
Yasmin Hafesji, Community Assistant
The Teaches of Peaches
Album
My favourite thing by an LGBT artist is the album The Teaches of Peaches by the incredible artist & musician Peaches, with a (predictable) special mention to the song Fuck the Pain Away.
The Drag King Book, by Del LaGrace Volcano
Book
They are a brilliant photographer, studying gender queerness and female masculinity, challenging every gender stereotype. They present a world of gender expression that we all need to experience and know; they’ve certainly helped me break the shackles of the gender binary and learn about the wonderful spectrum of human expression. The Drag King Book is a wonderful collection of photos of drag kings from around the globe. A drag king myself, I find it hugely inspiring!
Emily Aboud, Project 2036 Director
Hoe Diaries, By Karnage Kills
Song
Get involved with the conversation and tell us your top LGBT+ artists! Tweet us @Bushtheatre
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