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Gallery Gay Blog ✪

Come walk through my gallery. See the boy I was. Meet the man I’m becoming. Laugh at the glitter. Grieve the dark paintings. Stay a while in the quiet room where two mugs sit on a counter.

Next to it hangs The Year I Lost My Family . It’s a large, dark piece. Almost abstract. Splatters of navy and charcoal. In the corner, tiny figures walk away, their backs turned. For a long time, I wanted to take this painting down. Burn it. But I’ve learned that the darkest paintings make the bright ones brighter. They add depth. They tell the truth. The gallery isn’t a highlight reel. It’s a whole life. gallery gay blog

So this is my blog now. Not a diary. Not a manifesto. An invitation. Come walk through my gallery

Next to it is Domestic Bliss , a small, quiet watercolor. Two mugs on a counter. One says “Daddy” ironically. The other is just chipped blue ceramic. A cat sleeping on a pile of laundry. A text that says, “Pick up bread?” It’s the most radical painting in the whole gallery. Because my grandmother told me I would die of AIDS, alone in a hospital. Instead, I’m arguing about whose turn it is to do the dishes. Boring. Beautiful. Revolutionary. Laugh at the glitter

I used to think of my life as a timeline. A straight line, actually—the kind they drew on the chalkboard in health class. You’re born, you go to school, you marry a woman, you buy a house with a lawn, you die. Simple. Beige. The path was so narrow it gave me blisters.

At the very back of the gallery, in a small, softly lit room, is the piece I’m still working on. It’s called The Future . There’s no image yet. Just a blank, primed canvas. Sometimes I stare at it for hours. Some days I want to paint a marriage license. Some days, a photograph of a child with my eyes and his smile. Other days, just a door—open, with light pouring through.