


Quentin Crisp · Trans Woman · Art Print (in support of Do Not Fade)
"At the age of ninety, it has finally been explained to me that I'm not really homosexual. I'm transgender. I accept that now." Quentin Crisp
A portrait of Quentin Crisp as the trans woman she finally named herself to be in her final years. Drawn in ink and held in violets and roses, with the trans flag behind her. Soft, defiant, and finally seen.
A limited edition of 100, in support of Do Not Fade. Once these are gone, they’re gone.
All profits from this print go directly to Do Not Fade, a new trans-led short film by Quentin's great-nephew Adrian Goycoolea, co-written with Juliet Jacques, that imagines Quentin transformed into Orlyn Crisp, a young trans woman moving through time and gender to find herself alive today.
The film is being made by an all-trans-led team including Lavinia Co-op, Lexa Rowley and Elios K. Douglas, in partnership with Trans+ On Screen. Every print sold helps it reach the screen.
Support the crowdfunder directly: crowdfunder.co.uk/p/do-not-fade
Details
- Available in A3
- Printed on archival quality fine art paper
- Unframed
- Printed and shipped worldwide via my print on demand partner
- Typically 3 to 7 working days production and shipping
A note: Because the prints are fulfilled on demand, every penny of my margin (after print and shipping costs) is donated to the Do Not Fade crowdfunder. If you'd like to give more directly, please donate to the campaign. Every contribution makes the film possible.
🏳️⚧️ Trans lives, trans history, trans futures. They do not fade if we keep telling them.
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