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To mark the centennial of The New Negro—the groundbreaking 1925 anthology of poetry, essays, and art edited by Alain Locke—The Gay Harlem Renaissance invites visitors to immerse themselves in the richness of Black LGBTQ+ life in the 1920s and 1930s. This exhibition recognizes that Locke and many of the best-known writers and artists he championed were gay or bisexual, and it explores the queer mentorship and gay-inclusive salons and friendship circles that helped sustain the Harlem Renaissance. It takes visitors to Harlem’s posh segregated nightclubs, where LGBTQ+ singers and dancers lit up the stages for white downtowners—and to its modest rent parties and cellar speakeasies, where lesbian, bisexual, and transmasculine blues queens sang for gay and straight working-class Harlemites partying together. Throughout, it provides a sweeping portrait of Harlem after the First World War, when the Great Migration of Black Southerners, Caribbean migrants, activists, writers, painters, and performers transformed the neighborhood into the dynamic new capital of Black America. Uniting painting, sculpture, artifacts, documents, photographs, and music from collections across the country, The Gay Harlem Renaissance celebrates the creativity, innovation, and resilience of Black LGBTQ+ Harlemites in the face of racist pressures and homophobic laws. https://www.nyhistory.org/exhibitions/the-gay-harlem-renaissance
The The New York Historical is located at 170 Central Park West at Richard Gilder Way (77th Street) New York, NY 10024. Arrive at the museum at 2:00pm.
This CC and PG CLUE event is free to attend.
Registration: 24 spaces are available. Registration is required to attend.
Visit to the New York Historical Society - The Gay Harlem Renaissance – Fill out the registration form
Jeremiah Jurkiewicz (He/Him), Assistant Director of Social Justice, will be the chaperone for the trip. Jeremiah.Jurkiewicz@csi.cuny.edu 718.982.3091
February 27, 2026
2:00 PM — 5:00 PM
College of Staten Island
The New York Historical
170 Central Park West at Richard Gilder Way (77th Street) New York, NY 10024
718.982.3091
Free