The concept is simple: get a bunch of U-Haul trucks, assign an LGBT artist to each one, and park ’em in a lot around a performance stage.
Voila! It’s Install: WeHo, a sort of pop-up art gallery that kicks off LA’s Pride season, founded and curated by by Mark Cramer and Laura Watts. Click on through for some artsy highlights.
The What What Mini Putt guided golfers though holes that represented milestones in our shared queer history.
Liz Toonkel presented RIP My Pussy, in which she sang of the travails facing her vagina.
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Themegoman and Devan M performed a little Björk.
The See Saw Slippage by Sheila Malone and Gwynn Shanks featured embedded electronics that activated various video clips.
This is a cool attitude.
Volunteers have no idea what they’re getting into when Liz Toonkel invites them to participate in pussy-themed performance art.
Pete Zias performs as Crystal, an aimless mess.
Martin Von Sexy performs a monologue.
Let’s chill out.
The Lavender Effect celebrated our queer past with a lavender makeup station surrounded by LGBT history.
LaMuff wows the crowd.
A labyrinth in a U-Haul leads to a minotaur and karaoke station.
Jaunty gents.
Ian MacKinnon ponders heteronormativity or whatever.
Has anyone seen the TV?
The exhibit How do you Know? by Sarah Barnard asks participants how they know what gender they are.
Gavy K would like you to experience some poetry.
Earth to Moon serves up some coffeehouse realness.
The performance Dressed in Queer, Cloaked in Now was full of symbolism and things like that.
Dr. Courtney Spoons lectures on the hidden sexual meanings of Jack and the Beanstalk. You don’t really need that explained, do you?
Beloved Spirits presents an interpretive dance.