Curing, Shimmering, Together: A Ritual Performance and Collective Action
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Curing, Shimmering, Together: A Ritual Performance and Collective Action

Let's come together for a magical evening of performance and action - it's going to be a shimmering experience you won't want to miss!

By Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art

Date and time

Location

Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art

26 Wooster Street New York, NY 10013

Refund Policy

Refunds up to 7 days before event.

Agenda

5:45 PM

Doors


Plan to arrive promptly

6:00 PM

Performance Ritual


Performing reflective movement, Sungjae Lee activates RESISTERHOOD, with Young Sun Han orating and baptizing Lee and Young Joon Kwak in a glitter transformation

6:45 PM

Procession


Departing from the Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art at 26 Wooster St, we embark on a communal walk ending at Christopher Park / Stonewall National Monument. See below for the full route

7:45 PM

Counter-Monument


As the sun begins to set, the artists pose a counter-monument and invite viewers to intervene as part of activation

About this event

  • Event lasts 3 hours

The full walking route is here, departing from the Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art at 26 Wooster St promptly at 6:45pm, and taking Grand St → West Broadway → Washington Sq Park → W Washington pl. We end at Christopher Park / Stonewall National Monument.

Curing, Shimmering, Together is a two-part performance ritual and communal protest-walk led by Korean diasporic artists Young Sun Han, Young Joon Kwak, and Sungjae Lee—invoking ancestral queer and trans/non-binary intimacy, interdependence, resistance, and insurgent glitter. The collaborative performance unfolds as both a ceremonial activation of Kwak’s exhibition RESISTERHOOD and a public intervention in defiant response to the state’s ongoing attempts to erase trans and queer marginalized histories at the site of the Stonewall Uprising.

The performance opens in the museum gallery with Lee’s slow, reflective movement—casting light across the space in response to Kwak’s Glitter Manifesto. The artists then come together in a shimmering embrace as Han baptizes Kwak and Lee in liquid glitter. Veiled, bound, and visibly transforming as the glitter begins setting on their skin, Han guides the artists through the streets in a slow procession toward the Stonewall National Monument at Christopher Park. Audience members are invited to walk with them—as witnesses, protectors, and chosen family.

As the sun sets and the glitter cures, the artists arrive at the monument—offering a shimmering counter-monument to ongoing erasure, in communion with the Black and Latinx trans femmes who led the Stonewall Uprising. Together, they become a living declaration of queer Korean ancestral healing, power, and visibility—casting shimmer into the night.

This work was made possible, in part, by the Franklin Furnace Fund supported by SHS Foundation and the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council.

Organized by

The Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art is the only dedicated LGBTQIA+ art museum in the world with a mission to exhibit and preserve LGBTQIA+ art and foster the artists who create it.

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