メトロポリタン美術館のインスタグラム(metmuseum) - 6月27日 03時04分


How did artists and AIDS activists use art as a tool for propaganda and social change in the late 1980s? Where in New York City can we connect, viscerally, to this legacy today? This #PrideMonth, @メトロポリタン美術館 and @nyclgbtsites are exploring this together.
 
ACT UP—the AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power—is perhaps the most well-branded protest movement ever, largely due to Gran Fury, an anonymous artist collective of graphic designers within ACT UP. In New York City, ACT UP staged demonstrations designed to cause major disruption and attract media attention. The group’s first-ever demonstration took place in 1987 on Broadway at Wall Street, near the world’s leading financial center, and targeted pharmaceutical companies that were profiteering from the AIDS epidemic. 
  
Keep watching to explore more about the intersections of art, protest, and New York City from The Met’s Jasmine Kuylenstierna and @nyclgbtsites’ Ken Lustbader. 
 
✍ Gran Fury (active 1988–1995).  AIDS: 1 in 61, 1988. Offset lithograph. The Metropolitan Museum of Art. @metmodern


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