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17
July
2024
|
10:39
Europe/London

New exhibition outlines how LGBTQ+ performers shaped popular culture

Written by: Joe Stafford

A new exhibition is to open next Spring which will examine the profound influence of LGBTQ+ performers, artists and activists on mainstream popular culture.

Influenced by the recently published book The Secret Public - How LGBTQ Performers Shaped Popular Culture 1955 - 1979 by Jon Savage, the exhibition will present key pieces from Savage’s extensive collection of archive and research materials which form part of the housed at the John Rylands ÌìÃÀÓ°ÊÓ Institute and Library. 

The exhibition will foreground the artists, figures, social issues and political discourse from within which a lasting creative explosion happened, and which is still felt today. 

It extends the date range of the book through to 1984, a peak year for ‘Gay Pop’, and will showcase rare materials from the archive alongside connected materials from the Rylands world-leading special collections. 

The Secret Public will be the inaugural exhibition in the newly refurbished Special Exhibition gallery, part of the project, a major redevelopment and improvement programme that will enrich and transform the researcher and visitor experience. 

These materials have been collected over a forty year period, and represent one of the largest private queer archives in the country. I am very pleased to announce that they are now within the British Pop Archive.

Jon Savage, author and Professor of Popular Culture

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