TIME Magazineさんのインスタグラム写真 - (TIME MagazineInstagram)「Today, Randolfe Wicker is wearing a suit with a cartoon Lady Liberty tie and a button of Stonewall activist Marsha P. Johnson pinned to his lapel—accented by a pair of earrings made out of screws. But for several decades, Wicker, now 81, was never seen in public without his suit-and-tie uniform in a much more traditional black. He was wearing that black suit and tie at what’s thought to be the first U.S. picket for gay civil rights, which took place in #NewYorkCity in 1964. He wore it when he answered questions on-air in 1965 as one of the first openly gay men to appear on television. And he donned that suit again when he protested New York’s prohibition against serving gay patrons during a “sip-in” in 1966. Wicker jokes that he looked like a preacher for most of the 1960s—but for one of the earliest #LGBTQ activists, it was a political choice. It was also a choice that went hand-in-hand with the work Wicker did with the Mattachine Society, which he joined in 1958 when he was age 20. The Mattachine Society—considered one of the earliest gay #activist groups in U.S. history—had already existed for nearly a decade at that point, and its work in advocating for equal civil rights for gay people predated the Stonewall Uprising by nearly 20 years. Read more at the link in bio. Photographs by Sasha Arutyunova (@sashafoto) for TIME」6月26日 2時29分 - time

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 6月26日 02時29分


Today, Randolfe Wicker is wearing a suit with a cartoon Lady Liberty tie and a button of Stonewall activist Marsha P. Johnson pinned to his lapel—accented by a pair of earrings made out of screws. But for several decades, Wicker, now 81, was never seen in public without his suit-and-tie uniform in a much more traditional black. He was wearing that black suit and tie at what’s thought to be the first U.S. picket for gay civil rights, which took place in #NewYorkCity in 1964. He wore it when he answered questions on-air in 1965 as one of the first openly gay men to appear on television. And he donned that suit again when he protested New York’s prohibition against serving gay patrons during a “sip-in” in 1966. Wicker jokes that he looked like a preacher for most of the 1960s—but for one of the earliest #LGBTQ activists, it was a political choice. It was also a choice that went hand-in-hand with the work Wicker did with the Mattachine Society, which he joined in 1958 when he was age 20. The Mattachine Society—considered one of the earliest gay #activist groups in U.S. history—had already existed for nearly a decade at that point, and its work in advocating for equal civil rights for gay people predated the Stonewall Uprising by nearly 20 years. Read more at the link in bio. Photographs by Sasha Arutyunova (@sashafoto) for TIME


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