I kept my own work in a closet. Sketches on napkins. Poems written in the notes app at 2 a.m. Polaroids of boys I was too scared to kiss. Crumpled, hidden, gathering dust.
The thing about a gallery is that it’s never finished. You don’t open and then close. You keep creating. You keep hanging new work. Some nights, you have to take down an old painting because you’ve outgrown it. Some nights, you just sit on the floor in the middle of the room, surrounded by the mess of your own history, and cry. And that’s okay. That’s curation.
Here hangs First Pride . It’s a riot of color—sequins and leather and a thousand rainbows. The crowd is a blur of motion. In the center, a boy with glitter on his nose is laughing so hard he’s crying. That’s me. For the first time, I am not the “gay friend” or the “disappointment” or the “sinner.” I am just a boy, laughing in the sun, surrounded by thousands of people who also used to be alone in a crowded room.
Walking into my own gallery for the first time was terrifying. Because for thirty years, someone else had been curating the show. My parents hung the family portraits. My teachers installed the dioramas of “normal” futures. The church mounted a giant, gilded painting of a man burning in a lake of fire, labeled Consequences .
Coming out wasn’t a single event. It was the slow, agonizing decision to unlock the gallery doors, kick down the closet, and start hanging my own work on the walls.
Now, I think of it as a gallery.
So this is my blog now. Not a diary. Not a manifesto. An invitation.
The first piece is called First Touch . It’s not a photograph. It’s the ghost of a feeling—the electric shock of a hand on the small of my back at a bar. The way my spine turned to liquid mercury. The way I leaned in instead of running away. You can’t see it. You have to feel the warmth still radiating from the canvas.
