含羞草传媒

Author TJ Klune Headlines Queer X-travaganza

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New York Times bestselling author TJ Klune spoke to an enthusiastic crowd in Love Auditorium on Sept. 11, kicking off Queer X-travaganza, an evening celebrating queer and trans visibility, creativity, and the arts. Klune鈥檚 talk was followed by an exhibition opening at Picker Art Gallery and an artistic performance in Bernstein Hall. The events were in coordination with 含羞草传媒鈥檚 Arts, Creativity, and Innovation Initiative, presented by Living Writers, University Museums, and the Ryan Family Film Series.

Klune鈥檚 hit novel, The House in the Cerulean Sea, 鈥渋s set in a fantastical world where magical youth are shipped off to orphanages and treated as dangerous. This book and its sequel, Beyond the Sea, illuminate the very real difficulties of children and their advocates in 2025,鈥 Professor CJ Hauser, director of this year鈥檚 Living Writers Series, said in their introduction. As part of the series, Klune spoke to Hauser鈥檚 class earlier that day and participated in the Living Writers podcast. 

鈥淚f I use my platform to just tell stories, then I鈥檓 doing it wrong,鈥 Klune said on the podcast. 鈥淚 need to speak up not only for myself, but also for my community.鈥 He is a winner of the Lambda Literary Award, which celebrates LGBTQ+ writers.

The House in the Cerulean Sea was published at the start of the pandemic in March 2020 鈥 bad timing that Klune joked about in his talk. However, eight months later, the novel landed on the New York Times bestseller list for eight weeks straight. 

In Love Auditorium, Klune described his life growing up in rural Oregon and his personal struggles, including a mom and stepfather who didn鈥檛 accept him for who he was. The local librarian and his English teachers, Klune said, helped him realize his talents. Bolstered by their support, Klune said, he saw for the 鈥渇irst time in [his] life that 鈥 the written word has power. It can make people happy.鈥 

During the Q&A, one audience member said, 鈥House in the Cerulean Sea saved my life in a lot of ways. It was my first queer exposure to contemporary literature.鈥

Afterward, a shuttle transported guests to Picker Art Gallery鈥檚 opening reception of X: Gender, Identity, Presence in the Dana Arts Center. On exhibition were works of art by Cassils, Antonius-T铆n Bui, and significant queer artists hand-selected from the Picker collection. Cassils (he/they) is a transgender multidisciplinary artist who describes his performances as 鈥渟ocial sculptures that reflect on the histories of LGBTQ+ violence, representation, struggle, and survival.鈥 On display in the gallery was the first of three 鈥渟ocial sculpture鈥 films to be displayed over the course of the semester, each of which documents or adapts a live performance. The films invite trans and queer individuals to question 鈥渉ow to be together in solidarity and create communities of care and empowerment.鈥

Featured artist Antonius-T铆n Bui (they/them) works in various media, including performance, community-based works, and hand-cut paper portraits. These artworks 鈥渁llow Bui to explore their multifaceted identity as a queer, nonbinary Vietnamese-American artist, while helping to liberate the voices of marginalized communities.鈥 Their portraits also have meditative properties that create a space for reflection and resistance. In the act of creating each portrait, Bui looks back on their relationship with the subject and how they have influenced the artist鈥檚 life by crafting Bui into who they are today.

Selections from the Picker collection aimed to show how queer art has expanded throughout the past century. Artists included Claude Cahun, who described themselves as gender fluid, explored gender identity, and resisted fascism; and Yasumasa Morimura, who 鈥渃hallenged the male gaze and traditional beauty standards鈥 in his self-portrait photographs. 鈥淧airing this selection of works from the collection with those of Cassils and Antonius-T铆n Bui underscores not only the historical contributions of queer artists to the visual arts, but also the range of creative responses to questions of identity, social constructs about gender, and resistance to repressive dominant ideologies,鈥 explains Nick West, co-director of University Museums and curator of Picker Art Gallery. 

The final event of the night was Death Spiral, a live performance by Nicki Duval and Robbie Trocchia, featuring figure skater Milk, in Bernstein Hall鈥檚 Experimental Exhibition and Performance Space. Death Spiral included live figure skating movements, media projections, spoken word, and choreography.

Two performers play tug-of-war over blocks of ice
Death Spiral, with figure skater Milk, Robbie Trocchia, and Nicki Duval (Photo by Ryan J. Lee)

The 鈥渄eath spiral鈥 in figure skating 鈥 which requires the male partner to hold his female counterpart inches above the ice, while spinning 鈥 served as a metaphor for trust and risk in the queer community. 鈥淭hroughout the performance, the artist placed emphasis on their mistakes in making the piece, revealing how an embrace of both failure and queerness opens up new possibilities within the creative process and for navigating the world,鈥 West explains. 

Museum Operations Manager Darwin Rodriguez reflects on the night鈥檚 events: 鈥淓xhibition openings are special, because we as a cultural institution purposely fling the doors open and welcome our community into our spaces; they are evenings when museums are at their most accessible. It was humbling to find our program of events so well-received and supported across campus, especially in the current political and social climate. It鈥檚 a testament to 含羞草传媒 and its pursuit of rigor and fearless search for truth that made this night possible.鈥