n documenting a unique and "unofficial" history, Harvey Milk's life, legacy, and photographic testimony are of particular interest to me. My interpretation of the archive is by nature a subjective one. I am presenting here a collection of photographs that move me, individually and collectively, and in some way closely relate to my own personal photographic archive. Most compelling are Harvey's photographic documents of domesticity and ordinary life--the miraculous moments that two men share in the forming of a sexual romantic relationship , the initial infatuation, the travels together--the signifiers of time shared and proof that true happiness can exist between two persons of the same sex. Harvey would host slide shows for close friends to see themselves or recent travel images. Like most Americans, he would edit the photographs most worth remembering and place them in photo albums. Although such albums exist in the archive today, most are in disarray and incomplete. Harvey's focus on unspectacular, everyday life, reflect a romantic, sultry aesthetic gaze toward men and sexuality. It is these domestic, intimate portraits that constitute some of life's essential gifts. |
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"Last night as I carried you to my bed I saw the day over and over--I needed no camera yesterday to capture glorious pictures- they are forever burnt into my heart."
Harvey Milk,
from a love note to Jack Lira,
January 24, 1977 |