The City of North Miami honors LGBTQ pioneers with new art in public places

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The City of North Miami honors LGBTQ pioneers with new art in public places
Untitled (forms from MEDIAPRO HD ULTIMATE F/X 18 COLOR MAKEUP PALETTE), 5.5' x 12' x 6' (dimensions in feet), enamel over aluminum.



MIAMI, FLA.- The City of North Miami unveiled a new sculpture installation this past Saturday, March 4th, that was commissioned by the municipality to “Celebrate the legacy of Miami-Dade County’s lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer champions and the historic milestones of the LGBTQ community,” said Scott Galvin, the Councilman for the City of North Miami who spearheaded this project. The artwork, created by Miami artist Alan Gutierrez, will remain permanently installed at Enchanted Forest Elaine Gordon Park, located at 1725 NE 135th Street in North Miami.

This is the first time a permanent public art installation in Miami-Dade County honors the LGBTQ community in this manner. The sculpture includes a time-line that comes full circle from 1977-2017: starting with Ruth Shack's historic championing of gay rights in 1977, to forty years later when the made-in-Miami film Moonlight is the first LGBTQ film ever to win the Oscar for Best Motion Picture, as well as being the first with an all-black cast. Moonlight was directed and written by Miamians Barry Jenkins and Tarell Alvin McCraney.

“The project was originally inspired by the June 2016 tragedy at Orlando's Pulse nightclub," said Councilman Galvin, who has served in public office for 18 years (making Galvin one of the longest-serving openly gay elected officials in the United States). “Rather than be a somber memorial to those victims, North Miami's sculpture celebrates LGBTQ lives that inspire all of us, and acknowledges the legacy of LGBTQ milestones in Miami-Dade County's history,” adds Galvin.

This project was established through the City of North Miami's Art in Public Places program and is funded by the City of North Miami's Council District 1 budget. The process took nine months, and began in the summer of 2016 when Councilman Galvin expressed the idea to commemorate the tragedy at Orlando's Pulse nightclub.

A call-to-artists was published by the City of North Miami last September, and more than thirty artists responded to the call with their submissions. The winning artwork was selected by a committee of cultural leaders and experts, and the $30,000 award for production of the artwork was announced last November.

"The unveiling event was beyond poignant and moving in ways I didn't expect," said the artist Alan Gutierrez. "I knew I was creating something that would be a part of a community, but I didn't anticipate its place in a movement - a movement guided by pioneers on the new frontiers of love and acceptance."

"I decided to apply a bruise to my face for the unveiling ceremony, something I've done performatively before," adds Alan Gutierrez.

"I used some of the same colors to apply this bruise that are colors represented in the sculpture, to show the practical application of the colors. The idea is that you can use a tool, such as stage makeup, to emulate an emotive experience. I can create a bruise - which elicits a response. And this same technique can be used to alter or create new identities, in however fluid manner as one desires. It's very basic, but it really can change your life," said Alan Gutierrez.

Pioneers of the LGBTQ movement are featured in a plaque that stands alongside the artwork installation, serving as a time-line of Miami-Dade County’s Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Queer history.

City of North Miami Councilman Scott Galvin passionately recognized each honoree, starting with Ruth Shack: “We start with the lightning rod, the person who helped launch the LGBTQ movement across the United States,” said Councilman Galvin.

“It started here in Miami-Dade County in 1977 when Ruth Shack as a County Commissioner made the historic motion to amend the human-rights ordinance to include gay people. She made history 40 years ago not only for Miami-Dade County, but also setting into motion the force of a national movement that could not, would not – and will not — be stopped,” added Galvin.

Ruth Shack’s history-making battle for LGBTQ rights became national headline news in the 1970s when Anita Bryant (the singer and spokeswoman for Florida orange juice) led a controversial voter referendum campaign to overturn Shack’s ordinance. It would take 21 years for Miami-Dade County to restore these LGBTQ protections again.

“I am honored,” said Ruth Shack. “When we started this pursuit 40 years ago, and we tried to get the gay community together, there was no such thing. Because you risked your life, your family reputation and your job if you acknowledged the fact openly that you’re gay. And we see so many of the pioneers who had the courage to come forward here today. It’s so inspiring, so splendid. But we still have so much more work to do.”

Councilman Galvin also introduced some of the other LGBTQ icons honored by the City of North Miami at the unveiling, including:

• Florida State Rep. Elaine Gordon (the park where the installation is located is named after Gordon). She was an early proponent of legislation against hate crimes, and was an early champion of human rights (her children and grandchildren accepted the award on behalf of Rep. Gordon)

• Former Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Victoria Sigler, the first openly LGBTQ political figure to win judicial office in the state of Florida

• Miami-Dade Circuit Judge David Young, who came out publicly in 1994 while serving on the county court

• Mark King Leban, the first openly gay man appointed a Dade County court judge

• Former North Miami Mayor Kevin Burns, the first openly gay mayor in Miami-Dade County

• North Miami resident Martin Gill, an openly gay man who in 2010 won the right to become an adoptive parent, effectively ending Florida’s 33-year ban on gay adoption

• Florida State Rep. David Richardson, who in 2012 became Florida’s first openly gay member in its House or Senate

• SAVE, the LGBTQ-rights group that led the drive to restore the Miami-Dade human-rights ordinance in 1998, years after the battle between Anita Bryant and LGBTQ activists.

A city of North Miami Art in Public Places selection committee, approved by City Manager Larry Spring, reviewed all proposals and made the final selection for the new art installation.

The primary criteria for selection was previous artistic accomplishment, public art experience, and approach to the site-specific project.










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