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About
William Yang has documented the gay scene in Sydney since the 1970s. At this time many were celebrating new-found freedom, greater acceptance in society and the start of the Mardi Gras parades.
In these images from the 1990s Yang investigates the impact of AIDS on his friends and community, as well as the broader social implications of the disease. The works act as memorials which acknowledge both individual fears, the illnesses that AIDS and HIV bring, the repercussions on the gay community, and the importance of public displays of recognition and remembrance.
Details
Dates
1991
printed circa 1992
Materials used
gelatin silver photograph with hand-written text in black
Edition
5/20
Dimensions
26.8 x 40.5 cm image; 40.2 x 50.6 cm sheet
Signature & date
Signed and dated u.l.corner. [image]., black ink "... William Yang 1991".
Credit
Purchased 1997
Location
Not on display
Accession number
197.1997
Shown in 2 exhibitions
Exhibition history
Friends of Dorothy, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Paddington, 02 Feb 1997–01 Mar 1997
The Unflinching Gaze: photo media and the male figure, Bathurst Regional Art Gallery, Bathurst, 13 Oct 2017–03 Dec 2017
Referenced in 1 publication
Bibliography
William Yang, William Yang, Friends of Dorothy, Sydney, 1997, 70 (illus.).