News & Press


Dave Harper Dave Harper

THE BODY: No, We Didn’t ‘Lose an Entire Generation’ to AIDS

“The claim that we “lost an entire generation” to AIDS erases LGBTQ older adults who are very much alive, and it erases long-term HIV survivors, regardless of sexual orientation.” The article includes mention of “REVIVAL: Survivors’ Stories,” our program with The Generations Project.

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Dave Harper Dave Harper

GAY CITY NEWS: Honoring Activism, Humor, Sex, and Love

As darkens descended on the New York City AIDS Memorial in the West Village on December 1, 10 activists who, in the words of one, have long been “thriving” with HIV paid tribute to an equal number of writers, poets, and novelists who fell to the first of the pandemics we encountered in our lives.

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Dave Harper Dave Harper

NY1: NYC marks 33rd World AIDS Day with candlelight vigils

The city commemorated the 33rd World AIDS Day with events across the five boroughs, including candlelight vigils in Brooklyn and on Staten Island. In Manhattan in the evening, the American Run for the End of AIDS and GMHC hosted a candlelight vigil at the AIDS Memorial in Greenwich Village.

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Dave Harper Dave Harper

GAY CITY NEWS: Virtual, In-Person Events Planned for World AIDS Day

There are several local and national events commemorating World AIDS Day on December 1 — including a mix of in-person and virtual options for folks who would like to take part in the events from home. Most of the events are taking place on World AIDS Day, but there are also options over the following weekend.

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Dave Harper Dave Harper

GAY CITY NEWS: Writers Lost to AIDS Remembered

This year’s World AIDS Day observance at the New York City AIDS Memorial (West 12th Street at Greenwich Avenue) will begin at 5 p.m., with an hour of readings from the works of authors, poets, and filmmakers who died from AIDS-related causes.

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Dave Harper Dave Harper

them: How a New Generation of AIDS Memorials Is Shedding Light on the Epidemic

On May 18, 1981, physician and writer Dr. Lawrence Mass reported on an “exotic new disease” affecting the gay community for New York City’s local gay paper, The New York Native. By the end of that year, 130 people in the United States had died from the mystery illness. By the end of the decade, over 100,000 had died of AIDS.

Memorials have long sought to make sense of this cascading, exponential explosion of grief. The catastrophic emotional weight of the AIDS crisis at its peak cannot be overstated. In his scathing 1983 essay entitled “1,112 and Counting” for The New York Native, Larry Kramer, activist, playwright, and founder of ACT UP, reflected on the devastating loss, condemning those who remained passive in the face of despair.

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Dave Harper Dave Harper

ARTSPACE MAGAZINE: Look Inside The New York City AIDS Memorial Auction

"Unquestioning love demonstrates largesse”. Those are the words chiselled into Jenny Holzer’s white marble bench which is being offered in a high-profile sale featuring a truly incredible selection of contemporary art, at Christie’s in November 2021 to benefit the New York City AIDS Memorial.

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Dave Harper Dave Harper

GAY CITY NEWS: NYC AIDS Memorial Hosts 9/11 Remembrance Event

A 9/11 remembrance event at the New York City AIDS Memorial commemorated the 20th anniversary of the attacks. Storytellers gathered with locals in a somber event, where folks paid tribute to those who lost their lives in the attacks. Art2Action Inc., Greenwich House, the Rattlestick Playwright’s Theater, and Village Preservation were involved in the event, according to the New York City AIDS Memorial.

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Dave Harper Dave Harper

TIME OUT NY: 10 LGBTQ+ spots to visit right now in NYC

A stalwart structure of steel and granite fountain, the New York City AIDS Memorial honors the 100,000+ New Yorkers who’ve died of AIDS. As 2021 marks the 40th anniversary of the first reported U.S. AIDS cases, you may pay your respects here in remembrance of those who fought for equality before us.

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