Mile High | Digital Photocollage I 2026

Mile high?

Heck yeah.

A Stratos Jets survey of 2,000 regular flyers found that nearly 17% had done something sexual on a plane beyond kissing, and an additional 52% had fantasized about it. The term itself dates to 1914, when a young aviator named Lawrence Burst Sperry invented the autopilot system — which, as it turns out, freed up his hands for other things.

Nobody broke down the mile high club statistics by sexual orientation. Nobody thought to ask. Which is interesting, because it would have been a genuinely useful question. As of 2025, 9% of U.S. adults identify as LGBTQ+. Gay people have always been on those planes. The 17% who admitted to sky-high activity? We have no idea who they were going home to. Some of them may have been going home to each other. While this domain seems largely a heterosexual affair, we have to imagine there are some queer connections made.

This collage imagines just that.

Operating in a register of cloud like dreaminess — soft sky blues, pale creams, warm lavender—the work opens with a color palette that reads as almost pastoral. The flight attendant dominates the foreground, large beefcake and gloriously blurred. A twink in focus stands nearby noticing. Dominating the composition, narrative, and innuendo is the fabled foot long hot dog, connecting the two figures front to end, pun definitely intended.

It’s that kinda flight.

Last but never least, the quintessential gay heroine—Dorothy with Toto—she’s flown before. It’s all about the rainbow.

Classic.

Stratos Jets: The Truth About Mile-High Romance

HUD App Blog: The Mile-High Club — Is It Worth It?

Lonely Planet: Mile High Club Membership

Gallup: LGBTQ+ Identification in U.S. Rises to 9.3% (2025)

Chameleon

“Jeremy Has a Problem. No One Knows He’s Gay” | Digital Photo Collage | 2026

Jeremy stands at the center of every version of this collage. Eyes closed or nearly so. Chin slightly lifted. The blue moon behind him like a halo he didn’t ask for. Jupiter 3 overhead, logging everything.

He appears here in five colorways, two arrangements, countless combinations. Orange. Teal. Chartreuse and blue. Silver and ash. Natural. Radiating. The same man, the same pose, the same classical surround — acanthus scrollwork, reclining figures, a Pegasus in the corner — and yet each version reads differently. Cooler. Hotter. More distant. More present. Flattened into icon. Exploded into light.

That’s the formal argument. But the title is doing something else entirely.

No one knows he’s gay.

Which means Jeremy knows. Jeremy has always known. The problem isn’t the secret — it’s the performance of not having one. The daily calibration. The slight adjustment of register in every room, every conversation, every photograph. The closet isn’t a place you live in. It’s a filter you apply to yourself, over and over, in every available color.

The Closet Series has been making this argument since the beginning: that the labor of concealment is its own kind of art. Exhausting, meticulous, and invisible to everyone except the person doing it. Jeremy stands still at the center of each variation and lets the color do the work his face cannot.

The closet is not a static place. It is active, restless, constantly shifting — a chameleon that changes colors not by choice but by necessity. Often dazzling. Never boring. And never quite revealing the person at its center.

That is what this set of collages is. Not five versions of Jeremy. Five versions of the performance. The colorways don’t represent moods or aesthetics — they represent the daily costume changes of a life lived in translation. The work is available in any combination: diptych, triptych, full sequence, framed or unframed. However you arrange it, you are arranging the closet itself — its rhythms, its repetitions, its gorgeous, exhausting variety.

The Closet Series has been watching. The blood moon knows. Jupiter 3 isn’t surprised. — Behan

Shooting the Moon

Moon Shot

Digital Photocollage, 2026 | The Closet Series — Behan

NASA did not accidentally exclude gay astronauts. NASA deliberately, systematically, and institutionally shut the door on them. Not because they weren’t qualified. Not because they didn’t want to go. Because NASA decided they were disqualified by who they were, and built a bureaucratic apparatus to make sure of it.

Early NASA astronauts in the Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo programs were required to take two mandatory heterosexuality tests. Apollo astronaut Jim Lovell recalled one of them: “When the inkblots came up, we looked at them and, sure enough, we’d always see some feminine anatomy in there to make sure that we gave the proper sexual response.” The Rorschach inkblot test — administered by NASA to screen out gay men. In 1994, NASA asked a flight surgeon to formally include homosexuality as a psychiatrically disqualifying condition for astronaut selection.

NASA recruits heavily from the US military, which banned openly gay people from serving entirely until 1993 — and even then only partially, under Don’t Ask Don’t Tell, which itself wasn’t fully repealed until 2011. The pipeline from military service to astronaut corps meant that the military’s exclusion of gay people became NASA’s exclusion of gay people by default. You could not be openly gay and serve. You could not serve and become an astronaut. The closet was built into the system at the foundation.

It was not until 2016 that NASA created an LGBTQ Special Emphasis Program. Sixty years after the space program began.

Sally

Sally Ride was firmly ensconced in the closet when she became the first American woman in space in 1983, and is now recognized after the fact as the first LGBTQ+ person to have left the atmosphere. She stayed in that closet for the rest of her life. She died in 2012 — twenty-nine years after her first mission, nearly three decades after she looked down at Earth from space and saw it whole — and she never once said a word publicly about who she loved. Think about what that tells you. Not about Sally Ride, whose courage in every other dimension of her life was beyond question. But about the closet itself. About the weight of intolerance so severe, so sustained, so credible in its threats, that one of the most celebrated and accomplished women in American history calculated that silence was still the safer choice in 2012. The Republican Party, which spent those same decades legislating against gay existence at every level of government. The religious right, which spent those same decades declaring gay people unfit for public life. The Reagan administration, which watched gay men die of AIDS by the thousands and said nothing for years. NASA itself, which required heterosexuality tests of its astronauts and as recently as 1994 sought to classify homosexuality as a disqualifying psychiatric condition. These were the forces that held the closet door shut. Sally Ride did not choose silence. She was silenced. She came out at her own funeral because that was the first moment it was safe enough to tell the truth.

The Number

791 people have flown into space.

Only one has come out as gay.

Only one.

The Collage

Three men on the lunar surface. The Aquarian Moon overhead, large and patient. Jupiter 3 bearing witness from the upper right corner of the frame, as it always does — present, watching, unhurried. The lunar surface they stand on is not imaginary. The question of who belongs there is not rhetorical.

The question isn’t whether gay people belong in space. The question is when are they going to be allowed to go.

Sources

• Space.com: Why Aren’t There Any Openly Gay Astronauts? (2012)

• Live Science: Why Aren’t There Any Openly Gay Astronauts? (2012)

• Slate: Sally Ride Lesbian — Why Did the First American Woman in Space Stay in the Closet? (2014)

• LensCulture: The Gay Space Agency — Mackenzie Calle

• PhMuseum: The Gay Space Agency — Mackenzie Calle

• SentIntoSpace.com: LGBTQ+ People in the Space Industry (2023)

• QueerBio.com: The Queer Presence in Space Exploration

• CBC News: Astronaut Sally Ride Comes Out Posthumously (2012)

• Pink News: Documentary About Trailblazing Lesbian Astronaut Sally Ride (2025)

Go Speed Racer Go!

Go Speed Racer Go Queer!

Digital Photocollage, 2026 | The Closet Series — Behan

Trivia Tidbit: Speed Racer’s actual name is Esther and Trixie’s birth name is Carl. Who knew? The Aquarian Moon knew. Jupiter 3 always hoped. The Closet Series watched every episode.

And while watching, noticed something.

Gay people were always in cartoons. They just weren’t allowed to be gay.

What they were allowed to be was a joke. The mincing villain. The lisping sidekick. The character whose gender nonconformity existed purely for the audience to laugh at. From the earliest days of American animation, queerness was present — encoded, weaponized as comedy, and never taken seriously.

Bugs Bunny appeared in drag on at least 45 separate occasions. Chuck Jones, one of the creators of the character, admitted in the 1990s that he always imagined Bugs as transgender. And yet Bugs was never gay. He was a gag. The dress was the punchline, not the person. He married a man in at least three cartoons in the 1950s — and nobody called it what it was.

Disney’s Ferdinand the Bull (1938) was described by scholars as “not necessarily gay, but definitely queer” — a bull who refused to conform to expectations of masculinity. The Reluctant Dragon (1941) was called “extremely queer.” These characters were present. They were just deniable. Queer enough to register, straight enough to defend.

The pattern held for decades. Effeminate characters populated Saturday morning television as figures of gentle ridicule — too precious, too dramatic, too much. Their queerness was the costume, not the character. They existed to be laughed at, not identified with. Gay children watching these cartoons absorbed the message that was being transmitted: people like you are funny. People like you are not serious. People like you are not the hero.

It wasn’t until 2013, when Steven Universe aired, that a mainstream animated series made queer characters central rather than peripheral — ultimately featuring over 39 LGBTQ+ characters, with a nonbinary, bisexual showrunner behind the whole thing. That is eighty years of American animation between Bugs Bunny in a dress and a cartoon that actually meant it.

Speed Racer and Trixie are just fine.

The question is: how is their straight audience?

Sources

• Wikipedia: History of LGBTQ Characters in Animation

• Messy Nessy Chic: How Bugs Bunny Became a Queer Icon

• SpiritLive Radio: Queer Representation in Cartoons: A Trip Through Time

Lean LA

Leaning Into Pride

The Timeline is Always Present

Digital Photo Collage | 2026

November 11, 1950 — Los Angeles

Harry Hay and six other gay men hold the first meeting of what will become the Mattachine Society — the first sustained gay rights organization in the United States. They name it after a medieval French society of masked men who criticize ruling power from behind disguise. The masks are the point. The closet is the mask. They wear it and organize anyway.

August 1966 — San Francisco, Tenderloin District

One August evening, transgender women and gay men at Gene Compton’s Cafeteria fight back against a police officer who has harassed one of them. It is one of the first LGBTQ riots in United States history — three years before Stonewall. The exact date is lost. No news outlet covers it. No arrest records survive. We don’t even know the name of the trans woman who throws the first cup of coffee. History erases her. The Closet Series is making the missing photographs.

June 28, 1969 — New York City, Greenwich Village

Police raid the Stonewall Inn. Six days of riots follow. The date matters. June 28. Write it down. It is the reason we are here — in Los Angeles, in June, in 2026 — with Jupiter 3 overhead and the Aquarian Moon watching.

June 28, 1970 — Los Angeles and New York

One year after Stonewall, the first LA Pride parade rolls down Hollywood Boulevard. One of the first permitted Pride parades in the world. Twelve hundred marchers: drag queens, a woman on horseback, a giant python. Los Angeles is there from the beginning.

Late 1970s–1980 — Fire Island and beyond

The afternoon Tea Dances of Fire Island evolve into something larger. The Saint in New York. Trocadero Transfer in San Francisco. Then AIDS arrives and the dance floor becomes a place of protest, mourning, and refusal to disappear. The first circuit parties are born out of tragedy — fundraisers, rallies, declarations. Joy is always an act of resistance.

1989 — Palm Springs

The White Party is established. The circuit has arrived — formally, nationally, beautifully. Gay men in the sun. Dollars in their briefs. Saucers overhead. The blood moon says no. They dance anyway.

June 2026 — Los Angeles

The sign says: LEAN INTO IT.

Still not a suggestion.

Jupiter 3 is in the sky. The Aquarian Moon is watching. The boys are on the platforms, the crowd is vast and alive, and someone is kissing someone in the middle of everything, and someone has a laurel wreath, and the rainbow streamers are still hanging, and LA Pride is fifty-six years old, and we are still here, still leaning — all the way in.

The Closet Series has been watching. The blood moon knows. Jupiter 3 isn’t surprised. — Behan

Resources

Mattachine Society — Zinn Education Project / Library of Congress

Compton’s Cafeteria Riot — Susan Stryker, Screaming Queens (documentary, 2005)

Stonewall Riots — Britannica / Library of Congress / History.com

First LA Pride Parade, 1970 — LA City Historical Society / LAmag

Circuit Party History — The Advocate / Vice / Nexus Radio

White Party Palm Springs — established 1989

Um, Yeah.

Jesus Use Me | Digital Photo Collage | 2026

Who doesn’t want to be used by Jesus? I mean, come on.

— Behan

CONEY DAWG DAZE 2026 BEHAN

Coney Dawg Daze

A Monday Essay

James Behan, 2026

Coney Island has been a refuge for queer people for well over a century. Not by design — by nature. The beach has always offered what the city withheld: open air, fewer clothes, the anonymity of the crowd, and the particular freedom of a place where the normal rules were understood to be temporarily suspended.

The art tells the story.

c. 1879 — Samuel S. Carr, Beach Scene, oil on canvas. The Victorian beach is studied, formal, fully clothed. The social codes are intact and visible. Human desire, of course, was present too — it always was — and Coney Island was already learning how to accommodate it.

1898 — Strobridge Lithographing Company, Beach and Boardwalk Scenes, Coney Island, colour lithograph. The crowd has arrived. The amusements have arrived. The anything-goes atmosphere that would define Coney Island for the next century is already visible in the chaos of bodies, spectacle, and possibility.

1913–14 — Joseph Stella, Battle of Lights, Coney Island, Mardi Gras, oil on canvas. A Futurist explosion — color, light, sensation, the individual dissolved into the collective energy of the place. Stella understood Coney Island not as a location but as a feeling. That feeling was freedom.

1934 — Paul Cadmus, Coney Island, oil on canvas. Cadmus, a gay artist of considerable courage, renders the beach as a scene of barely managed desire — bodies piled together, muscle and flesh and comic excess. It is the gay gaze fully deployed, visible to those who knew how to look.

2026 — Behan, Coney Dawg Daze, digital photo collage. The gay pool party as contemporary beach scene. The acrobatic figure, the crowd, Jupiter 3, the moons, the Coney dog — democratic, excessive, joyful. A hundred and fifty years of queer beach culture arriving at full color and full volume.

What connects Behan’s collages to these works is not merely subject matter but formal instinct. The long horizontal format — the panoramic view that allows individual figures and scenes to play out across a wide field — runs from Carr’s Victorian beachgoers through the Strobridge lithographs to Stella’s explosive canvas and into Behan’s digital collages. It is the format of water itself. Shared too is the sense of organized chaos — figures caught in motion, in relation to each other, the whole scene vibrating with energy held just barely in check. And the color. From Stella’s Futurist fireworks to Cadmus’s flushed flesh tones to Behan’s digitally saturated palette, the beach has always demanded full color. These artists, across more than a century, understood that.

Whenever humans get close to water, things change. The codes loosen. The clothes come off. The body remembers something older than civilization. We spent our first nine months suspended in water. We are composed of it. The beach and the pool are not escapes from the human condition — they are returns to it. Every artist in this essay understood that. So did every gay man and woman who found their way to Coney Island across more than a century of American life.

Behan’s own connection to Coney Island is personal. “I was lucky enough to visit Coney Island in the 1990s for their annual Mermaid Parade. I enjoyed a Coney dog. I was able to see and experience and feel what my own father felt and experienced as a young man in the 1940s. This type of connection is so valuable and is a memorable experience to this day.” — Behan

The AI data centers now consuming extraordinary quantities of fresh water for cooling — water drawn from the same finite supply that fills our pools, our beaches, our bodies — represent a troubling new pressure on the most fundamental human resource. The beach has always been where people went to remember what mattered.

What happens when the water itself is at risk?

— Behan

Velocirapting

End of Oak Street: A Series

Digital Photo Collage 2026

This August, Warner Bros. releases The End of Oak Street — directed by David Robert Mitchell, starring Anne Hathaway and Ewan McGregor as the Platt family, transported by a mysterious cosmic event to a prehistoric world where survival depends on sticking together. It looks terrifying. It looks thrilling. It looks like exactly the kind of film that should exist in every possible configuration of family.

So the Closet series has some casting suggestions:

The Alternative Casting collages recast the Platt family twice — once as a gay married male couple, once as a married lesbian couple, legal and permissible in the United States. The visual continuity of the original film doesn’t suffer. If anything, the heteronormative family structure that anchors most big-budget action cinema is looking a little tired. Both castings work. Both would make money. Both would win awards. Neither exists because Hollywood decided they wouldn’t before they tried.

The Gay Guys collage takes a different approach. Rather than recasting the family, it simply adds gay men to the neighborhood — present, unbothered, fully capable of handling a prehistoric situation. Hollywood has been running on queer coding for fifteen years while promoting itself to an audience that won’t set foot in the theater. Democrats go to movies at more than twice the rate of Republicans. The gay audience has been showing up and buying tickets for decades. Hollywood cashed the check yet never said the word.

We should just be there. On Oak Street. Battling the dinosaurs. Fierce in the fight and fabulous in the fashion.

That’ll sell some tickets.

— Behan

Turtle Creek

What Up? | Digital Photo Collage | 2026

Before Grindr, before apps, before any of it, gay men found each other the old fashioned way. A look held too long. A knowing glance. A car parked in exactly the right place at exactly the right time.

Cruising — the search for connection and sex in public or semi-public spaces — has been part of gay culture for at least two hundred years. The term itself emerged in the 1960s as gay slang, a code word that shielded what it described. Parks. Bathrooms. Waterfronts. Truck stops. The car was always part of it — mobile, private, deniable. You were just parked. Just sitting.

Just two guys in a truck.

The car was also an avenue of escape. An hour of being exactly who you were before driving back to the office, the house, the life that didn’t have room for this. Some guys kept their cars stocked — lube, paper towels, the essentials. A rolling station of possibility. In Dallas it was the noon hour in Turtle Creek or Reverchon Park. Every city had its version. Every city still does.

The man outside the window is a recurring figure in that history too. The one who walks up. The one who sees. The one whose cross doesn’t quite explain the expression on his face.

What up?

— Behan

Closet Games

The Republican Party consistently opposes marriage equality, transgender rights, and LGBTQ+ protections at every level.

And yet.

• July 18, 2016 — Republican National Convention, Cleveland. Grindr records a 120% spike in users on opening night alone.

• July 15, 2024 — Republican National Convention, Milwaukee. Blank profile photos multiply by the hundreds.

• July 17, 2024 — Expelled Republican Congressman George Santos posts a video calling the RNC the “Grindr Super Bowl” and urges closeted conservatives to come out.

Sadly, the closet is alive and well in the Republican Party.

The Closet Series is gobsmacked.

Closet Games Digital Photocollage 2026 Behan

#TheClosetSeries #QueerHistory #GOPCloset #Grindr #PrideMonth #LGBTQ #BehanWorks

American Pie

The American Pie is (Once Again!) on a Ledge

Digital Photocollage Series, 2026

The American living room has always has a sofa where the family presents itself — to guests, to neighbors — with a version of itself it most wants to believe. It is where uncomfortable things are said and quickly recovered from, where the television plays and nobody quite watches, and where my father once told us that if people just didn’t talk, everything would be fine. The American living room is the public face of the private family. It is where performance happens.

The American bedroom is where this performance ends — where the truth of who you are exists without an audience, where there is no version to maintain.

Gay men have always known the distance between those two rooms intimately, the living room where we behave and the bedroom where we relax. The collages presented in this post as well as this essay live in both these rooms simultaneously.

Fury and wit have always been the gay man’s tools for survival: the wit to deflect, the fury to sustain. Both are present in these collages. Both are necessary for what follows: a timeline of the distance between the promise America made in 1776 and the promise it has actually kept for its gay sons and daughters.

A Queer Timeline

  • July 4, 1776 — The Continental Congress adopts the Declaration of Independence. All men are created equal. Gay men are not included.

  • 1778 — Baron Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben, a gay Prussian general recruited by Benjamin Franklin, drills the Continental Army into a fighting force.

  • 1955 — The American Law Institute votes to remove consensual sodomy from the Model Penal Code. Most states ignore it. Gay men remain criminals.

  • February 3, 1959 — Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, and the Big Bopper die in a plane crash in Clear Lake, Iowa. The day the music died.

  • June 28, 1969 — Stonewall. Greenwich Village, Manhattan. A police raid. A riot. The modern gay rights movement begins.

  • October 24, 1971, Don McLean’s American Pie is released. Gays sing along to the slow collapse of the American promises

  • December 15, 1973 — The American Psychiatric Association removes homosexuality from the DSM. By a vote, a majority decides that desire is not a disease. America continues without acknowledging this enormous change.

  • July 4, 1976 — The bicentennial. Two hundred years. America throws a party. Gay men are still criminals in most states. They watch from the margins.

  • June 26, 2003 — Lawrence v. Texas. The Supreme Court strikes down sodomy laws. The body, at last, belongs to itself.

  • June 26, 2015 — Obergefell v. Hodges. Marriage equality, nationwide. The promise inches forward.

  • July 4, 2026 — The 250th anniversary. The promise has never been more threatened. An autocratic president dismantles democratic norms in plain sight. We do not know, with certainty, whether we will have a functioning democracy in two years. Fifty years after the bicentennial. Fifty years after American Pie. The music is in worse trouble than McLean imagined.

The Only King in America is a California King

Like every other marginalized group in the United States, gay men and women have always been in the room — in the fight, in the field, in the foundational work of this republic. We did not watch from the outside. We built the inside.

Baron Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben, Washington’s Inspector General, was gay. Historians consider him second only to Washington himself in importance to winning the Revolution. He drilled the Continental Army into a fighting force at Valley Forge during the darkest winter of the war. He wrote the drill manual that the United States Army used for more than a century. He helped secure the promise of 1776. He was never invited to enjoy that promise himself.

He was not alone in that arrangement.

The White House — the house that the current administration occupies while dismantling the rights of everyone who is not white, straight, and wealthy — was built by enslaved people. Black men and women whose labor constructed the seat of American power were not considered citizens. Were not considered fully human under the law. Were property. The promise of 1776 did not apply to them either, and the men who wrote it knew it and did it anyway.

The indigenous peoples of this continent were here before the promise was written. They fought for America too — in every war this country has declared, including wars fought against their own nations. In World War II, Navajo Code Talkers developed an unbreakable code that the military used throughout the Pacific theater. Their language, which the United States government had spent decades trying to eradicate through forced assimilation and boarding schools, became one of the most valuable military assets America possessed. They saved lives. They won battles. They came home to a country that still did not recognize them as full citizens in every state until 1948.

Women have been in every war this country has fought, in roles that were systematically minimized, erased, or denied. Black soldiers fought in segregated units, came home to Jim Crow, and were told their sacrifice did not earn them equality. Japanese Americans were interned while their sons volunteered to fight for the country that imprisoned their families — the 442nd Infantry Regiment became the most decorated unit in United States military history.

Gay soldiers fought in every war too. Closeted, silent, under threat of dishonorable discharge if discovered, they served anyway. They served because this was their country too, whatever the country thought of them.

This is the American pattern. Every marginalized group has contributed to the construction and defense of this republic. Every marginalized group has been told, at various points and by various factions, that their contribution does not entitle them to the full promise. That they are welcome to build but not to belong. To fight but not to lead. To serve but not to marry. To exist but not to be equal.

Right now, in 2026, transgender Americans who want to serve their country in the military are being barred from doing so by executive order. Black generals and women up for promotion are being passed over by a racist executive branch that is systematically purging the military of anyone who does not reflect its narrow vision of who an American soldier should be. Immigrant communities are being terrorized by detention and deportation. The institutions built over two and a half centuries of painful, incremental progress toward the promise of 1776 are being dismantled with deliberate speed.

This is not new. It is a very old pattern wearing new clothes.

Von Steuben won the Revolution for a country that would not let him love openly.

The enslaved built the White House for presidents who would not free them.

The Navajo saved the Pacific theater for a government that had tried to eradicate their language.

The 442nd bled in Italy for a country that had locked up their families.

And gay men buried their dead during AIDS while the government looked away.

The Collages

Color is prima facie. These are not quiet works. The public-facing collages — the station wagons, the eagle, the boxing ring — operate in a register of controlled chaos. Oranges and reds press against electric blues. American flags bleed into flesh tones. Figures from different eras and different visual registers are forced into the same plane at mismatched scales, their edges broken, their resolutions incompatible. Nothing quite fits. Everything insists on being present anyway.

The visible seams are part of the argument. Digital photocollage as a medium makes its construction legible — you can see where the pieces come from, where they don’t align, where the scale breaks down. In these works, that visibility is not a limitation to be overcome but a formal choice that carries meaning. The incompleteness of the surface reflects the incompleteness of the American project. A culture that has never fully resolved its own contradictions should not be rendered in smooth, unbroken surfaces.

The chaos is controlled, however. There is compositional effort underneath the noise — figures anchored at the center, moons and spacecraft placed with precision, the horizontal panoramic format of the multi-panel works creating a reading sequence that moves like a timeline across the eye. The disorder is organized disorder. You know, the American kind.

Against this, the private spaces are strikingly different in visual temperature. The bedroom triptychs and the intimate diptychs operate in cooler, quieter registers — blues and neutrals, softer light, figures at rest rather than in motion. The aquarian moon appears here, large and calm, presiding without judgment. Jupiter 3 hovers at the edge of the frame rather than cutting through it. The composition breathes. Where the public collages crowd the picture plane, the private ones allow space — between figures, between panels, between the viewer and the image.

This contrast is the formal argument of the series made visible. The chaos belonging to the public sphere and the calm belonging to the private sphere — gay men have always known this geography. These collages map it.

Repetition functions throughout as both rhythm and insistence. In the gas station work, a single figure multiplies across the surface — not quite wallpaper, not quite crowd, something between pattern and testimony. Repetition in visual art establishes comfort through familiarity. But when the repeated figure is one that dominant culture has historically criminalized or erased, the comfort curdles into something more complex. The eye settles into the pattern and then registers what the pattern is actually showing. That double response — ease and unease simultaneously — is exactly what the works are reaching for.

The diptych and triptych formats invoke the devotional tradition deliberately. These are secular altarpieces. The multi-panel structure asks for sustained attention, for the eye to move between panels and assemble meaning across the sequence.

The series questions and confirms simultaneously. It holds its contradictions in the same frame without resolving them — which is the most honest formal choice an American artwork can make right now. The bright colors celebrate. The broken edges mourn. Both are true. Both stay in the picture.

The American pie is still on the ledge, still a most precarious place to be. We are watching.

CJ in Pompeii

House of Clarke

A Series of Ten Digital Photo Collages, 2026

The walls of Pompeii were covered in graffiti. Male-for-male sexual encounters advertised openly in taverns and public spaces. The frescoes of the great houses depicted every configuration of desire without apology or classification. Two figures found embracing in the ash of Vesuvius — frozen in their final moment together — were labeled The Two Maidens for nearly two centuries. DNA testing recently confirmed they were both biological males, approximately eighteen to twenty years old. The argument about what that means has been going on ever since.

This series is dedicated to those two young men.

The ancient Romans did not organize sexuality around the gender of partners. They organized it around power and social class. The modern concept of being gay did not exist. What existed was desire — expressed on walls, in frescoes, in the graffiti of taverns, in the arms of another person as a volcano buried the city that had never thought to be ashamed of any of it.

When the excavations began in the eighteenth century, the sexually explicit artifacts of Pompeii were so numerous and so frank that archaeologists placed them in secret museums, accessible only to scholars and gentlemen of sufficient moral standing. The word pornography was coined specifically to classify them. The Romans had painted desire on their walls. The moderns invented a word to lock it away.

CJ Clarke is a contemporary content creator and OnlyFans star. Is he gay? Bisexual? Straight? The question follows him the way it follows every man who occupies this visual space — who makes his body the subject, who performs desire for an audience, who lives in the gap between what is shown and what is said. Our culture cannot stop asking.

For the Romans, this was never a question. The question is ours. So is the closet it came from.

House of Clarke places CJ Clarke inside the frescoed rooms and erotic visual culture of Pompeii. Not as a joke. Not as a provocation. As a continuation. A furtherance of the humanity that was sealed under ash.

The bodies on those walls were never lost. They were locked away. They were invented new words to contain them. They were argued about, classified, purified, and explained. And they are still here.

Life is always happening.

This series is dedicated to the Two Unknown Young Men of Pompeii, found together in the ash, who have been argued about ever since. They know what they were.

— Behan

Blonde

Blonde Bombshell… The Golden Era

Let us put this to rest, now and forever.

If the 1950s gave straight culture its blonde bombshells — Marilyn, Doris, Jane — then the 1980s gave gay men theirs. Eric, Lance, Leo, and Jack. Golden, physical, joyful, California-born and California-lit. They were not sinners. They were not cautionary tales. They were stars — and for gay men across America who had no other mirror, they were lifelines.

The golden era of gay adult filmmaking gave isolated men something the mainstream culture refused to: the sight of themselves, joyful and real. And when AIDS arrived, the industry did something the Reagan administration would not. It educated. It demonstrated. It insisted on visible protection at a moment when the government was actively blocking safer sex information from reaching the men who needed it most.

Gay adult films saved lives.

It connected men to a culture that sustained them. The rainbow lifeguard tower doesn’t stand on the beach by accident. It stands there because when the hospitals were afraid to help, the community showed up — lesbians nursing dying gay men, neighbors feeding the sick, strangers becoming family.

Princess Diana shook a gay man’s hand in 1987 when the world still believed you could catch AIDS from touch. That was an important moment. God, we miss her.

These men are saints of the era for the gay community. To impugn them is a sacrilege. The Aquarian moon knows it. Jupiter 3 agrees.

The Closet Series. 2026.

#TheClosetSeries #BlondeBombshell #GoldenEra #QueerHistory #LGBTQHistory #VenicePride #QueerArt #DigitalPhotocollage #SaintsOfTheEra #NeverGoingBack

Cali Blue 82

California Blue

On 1980s California Gay Culture, the AIDS Crisis, and the Films of William Higgins

Let us put this to rest.

At a legal and cultural level, gay adult film is neither sinful nor immoral. It is legal expression made by and for consenting adults, protected by the same constitutional framework that protects every other form of speech and creative expression in this country. The notion that homosexuality itself is sinful or immoral has equally no place in our laws or our dominant culture. It is entirely appropriate for a minority religious tradition to hold that view within its own walls. It is not appropriate — it is in fact a form of cultural aggression — to allow that view to shape legislation, public policy, or the social contract that governs all Americans regardless of faith. A religion that seeks to codify the diminishment of other people’s lives is not expressing faith. It is operating as a hate group. And hate groups, like any other destructive force, should be contained — not celebrated, not legislated, and not permitted to define the terms of a pluralist democracy for everyone else.

This essay is about a people being oppressed by an intolerant minority. And it is time to stop.

To understand why this argument is not abstract but urgent, you have to understand what was actually happening in California before AIDS arrived — what was being built, what was being lived, and what was taken. Because the people being judged were not abstractions. They were young men in the sun, building something that had never existed before in American life.

One man who lived through it in the Castro described that era in three words: party, party, party. Translated into the language of what it actually was: freedom, freedom, freedom.

The 1970s had delivered something genuinely new to American gay life: a geography of freedom. Gay men from across the country migrated to San Francisco’s Castro District, drawn by word of mouth, by the promise that a different kind of life was possible. By the summer of 1978 — what many recall as the high point of the Castro’s development — a new society had taken shape. Gay softball leagues. A gay chorus. Three gay and lesbian newspapers. Gay men building institutions, building community, building a world that had never existed before on American soil.

California was the backdrop and the metaphor. The state had always promised reinvention — the frontier, the Gold Rush, the movies, the counterculture. Now it was promising something else: the freedom to be exactly who you were, in full sunlight, without apology. The decade of the 1980s dawned on a San Francisco gay community with well-established political clout and a fully realized culture of sexual liberation. Gay Pride and Gay Power were in full bloom. Harvey Milk was in office.

And the sun was everywhere. The colors were neon and pastel and luminous. Ocean Pacific — OP — was selling its bright geometric sportswear out of Huntington Beach surf shops and into national chain stores, its designs moving from primary color stripes to bold neon shapes as the decade shifted. Izod Lacoste polos in every pastel shade defined the preppy aesthetic. The movies that captured California for the nation — Fast Times at Ridgemont High, Valley Girl, The Karate Kid, The Lost Boys — were drenched in that same saturated light, that same cheerful insistence that pleasure was the point and the coast was paradise. Don’t worry. Be happy. The tan will last forever.

The California Look

In this context, William Higgins was doing something that deserves to be understood as more than pornography. He was making documents.

Higgins founded Catalina Video in the late 1970s and spent nearly two decades producing gay adult films with what the industry called the “California Look” — sun-drenched, athletic, outdoors, unapologetically physical. Pacific Coast Highway. Sailor in the Wild. California Blue. Boys of Venice. These were not underground productions shot in shame and shadow. They were made in the same California light that lit every other film being made in the state — the rocks at Joshua Tree, the beaches of Malibu, the golden hills of the interior. Gay men as beautiful and physical and joyful as any other young Americans, doing what young Americans do in the California sun.

Higgins got into the pornography business, he said, because the gay films of the mid-1970s were “so bad” that he decided to start making them himself. He brought production values, narrative ambition, and a genuine aesthetic to a form that had been operating largely in the dark. His films won industry awards. They were distributed internationally. They gave the gay men who watched them something the mainstream culture systematically denied: the sight of themselves, at ease, at play, in their bodies, in their pleasure, without punishment.

This is not a small thing. For gay men across America — isolated in conservative towns and families, invisible in their schools and workplaces, told by their churches that their desire was an abomination — these films were lifelines. To judge these films, and this lifestyle, and the men they were made for — read the disclaimer at the start of any gay adult film, which has always been explicit about its intended audience — by the standards of any single religious tradition is to misunderstand what they were and what they did. No one denomination has the authority to determine the moral weight of a lifeline. All marginalized communities understand this dynamic: visibility is a necessity, not a luxury. The men who found themselves in those images — recognized, present, joyful, real — were not sinning. They were surviving and thriving.

There is a persistent and revealing irony in the straight male relationship to gay male culture. Straight comics have long mined gay men for material — but the laughter has always had an undertow of something else. Envy. The freedom is visible. The happiness is visible. The comfort in the body, the ease with pleasure, the absence of the particular straight male terror of being seen wanting something — all of it visible, and all of it apparently infuriating to men who have been told that desire must be managed, hidden, performed only in the right contexts with the right people. Some straight men have said openly that they wish they were gay — and the laughter that follows is the laughter of a contradiction that the culture cannot resolve. The oppressive sentiment and the secret wish occupy the same man at the same time.

And then there is gay for pay — straight men appearing in gay adult films because, as they will tell you directly, the pay is better. Which it is. The straight man who will perform desire for another man on camera for money, while insisting on his heterosexuality, is perhaps the most complete expression of the contradiction. The culture says one thing. The body, and the bank account, say another. Clark sits at the breakfast table. The oatmeal goes cold. He hates it cold.

This essay references collages that draw directly on this tradition. The central figure — striped shirt, director’s chair, California sun, the Aquarian moon watching overhead and Jupiter 3 hovering nearby — is the man at the center of the decade. Comfortable in his body. Comfortable in his desire.

And Then the Light Changed

The initial clusters of a rare pneumonia and an unusual cancer appeared in Los Angeles’s gay community in 1981. By 1982 and 1983, the virus was moving through San Francisco’s Castro District with devastating speed. San Francisco General Hospital pioneered what became known as the San Francisco Model — patient-centered, compassionate care delivered in dedicated AIDS wards that became a global standard. The community organized with extraordinary speed and courage: hospices, legal support networks, grassroots education campaigns, organizations like Project Open Hand delivering meals to the sick. The AIDS Memorial Quilt, conceived by activist Cleve Jones in 1987, grew to become the largest community folk art project in American history — each panel a name, a life, a person the culture had been prepared to forget.

The federal government watched in silence.

Ronald Reagan did not make his first public speech on AIDS until 1987 — six years into the epidemic, by which time more than 20,000 Americans had died. In 1982, his press secretary laughed when a journalist asked whether the president was tracking the spread of the disease. When Reagan’s close friend Rock Hudson was dying of AIDS in 1985, Nancy Reagan declined to intervene on his behalf. Senator Jesse Helms amended a federal appropriations bill to prohibit AIDS education that might “encourage or promote homosexual activity” — meaning, in practice, education that might save lives. The administration that preached traditional values and family strength looked at a generation of young men dying and chose silence. It chose it deliberately, repeatedly, and for years.

Dr. Marcus Conant, one of the first physicians to confront AIDS as it moved through the San Francisco gay community, lobbied the Reagan administration in 1982 for an emergency public education campaign. The president waited five more years to publicly mention the crisis. “Ronald Reagan and his administration committed a crime,” Conant said later, “not just a sin.”

The Cruelty of the Outing

Among the many devastations AIDS visited on gay men, one of the cruelest and least discussed was the forced outing it produced on a massive scale. Young men who had built lives in California — who had moved west for exactly the freedom the Castro and the beach culture and the films of William Higgins represented — suddenly found their private lives exposed in the most brutal way imaginable. A diagnosis was not just a medical event. It was a revelation. It told families, employers, communities, churches, everything they had not been told and had not been invited to know. Men who had been navigating the closet with care and courage for years were stripped of that navigation in an instant, at the moment of greatest vulnerability, with no preparation and no choice.

Conservative families who had managed not to know — who had perhaps suspected but had not been required to confront — were suddenly confronted. And many of them responded not with love but with the theology of judgment. AIDS was God’s punishment. The diagnosis was confirmation of everything they had feared and condemned. Young men died rejected by the people who were supposed to love them most, outed by a virus into a family that had decided, on religious grounds, that their lives had been a sin. This is among the most complete cruelties in the history of the American family. It deserves to be named as such.

The Families

The conservative families who saw AIDS as God’s judgment were not an abstraction. They were real, and they were numerous, and they were the reason many gay men died alone. Young men who had come to California for freedom, who had built lives in the Castro and on the beaches and in the sun, found themselves sent home to die in communities that had always regarded them as aberrations. Or they died in San Francisco, surrounded by a chosen family that the official culture refused to recognize, mourned by people who had no legal standing and no institutional support and built everything from scratch anyway because what else do you do when the world abandons you.

The gay euphoric delirium of the 1970s was replaced by the sobering crisis of the 1980s. But AIDS, which had the potential to destroy the gay liberation movement, in fact brought the community closer than ever before. It created new solidarities — between gay men and lesbians, between the sick and the healthy, between those who had been politically active and those who had never been before. It produced ACT UP, Shanti, Project Open Hand, the Coming Home Hospice, the Quilt. It produced a generation of activists who had learned, at catastrophic cost, that silence equals death.

What the Collages Hold

What Behan’s collages hold is the whole of it — the joy and the danger, the sunlight and the reckoning. The bodies in motion on the California rocks and beaches, caught in the specific golden-orange light of Higgins’s films. The Aquarian moon witnessing. Jupiter 3 hovering.

The era the films document was real. The men in them were real. The freedom they were experiencing — briefly, fiercely, in full California light — was real. And what ended it was not nature. It was not God’s judgment. It was a government that decided, for reasons of ideology and political convenience and moral cowardice, that some Americans were not worth saving.

And so we return to where we began.

At a legal and cultural level, gay adult film is neither sinful nor immoral. Homosexuality is neither sinful nor immoral. These are not opinions. They are the settled conclusion of every major medical, psychiatric, and legal institution in the developed world. The view that they are sinful belongs to a minority religious tradition and should remain there — contained within its own walls, practiced among its own faithful, and stripped entirely of its ambition to govern the lives of people who do not share its faith. When that ambition escapes those walls and enters the legal system, the school system, the hospital, the family — when it is permitted to determine who receives care and who does not, who is protected and who is expendable — it ceases to be religion. It becomes a hate group with a tax exemption.

This essay is about a people being oppressed by an intolerant minority. The California sun is still there. The freedom is still worth fighting for. And it is time to stop.

The Closet Series has been watching. The Aquarian moon knows. Jupiter 3 was never lost in space. — Behan.

Someone Get the Door Please

Domesticity and Other Rituals

Digital Photo Collage 2026 James Behan

Domesticity is the great fiction of the postwar American century — the idea that the home was a settled, knowable space with settled, knowable people in it.

Mid-century modernism disagreed. It rejected Victorian ornament, historical precedent, the weight of the old world.

Clean lines.

Open plans.

New materials.

New ways of living.

Its argument was not merely aesthetic — it was social and philosophical. The open floor plan dissolved the hierarchy of rooms and the hierarchy of people within them. The rejection of inherited ornament was also a rejection of inherited social codes.

The mid-century modern home was built for the new at the expense of the old. And the new in the twentieth century was women’s rights, civil rights, gay rights, Latino rights, Asian rights.

That is what the dominant culture did not anticipate when it bought into the carport and the efficient U-shaped kitchen. It thought it was purchasing an aesthetic. It was purchasing a social revolution.

It is not a surprise that gay men and women have always loved mid-century modern architecture. They recognized what it was saying before the dominant culture did. They preserved it, restored it, and lived in it — most visibly in Palm Springs, where the gay community literally saved the buildings the mainstream had abandoned.

The architecture spoke to people who understood its actual argument. The house was ready for them before the culture was.

Someone get the door please.

Peter, Jan, and James Collab

Earthly Paradise and the Spring of Man

A Collaboration: Peter Paul Rubens, Jan Brueghel the Elder, and James Behan. 1615–2026.

In 1615, Peter Paul Rubens and Jan Brueghel the Elder collaborated on a painting of the Garden of Eden — the moment before the fall, or perhaps during it, the fruit already in hand, the animals assembled in impossible abundance, the light falling on every creature with equal generosity. They painted paradise. That is what artists do. They go to paradise and they stay there.

The Church took the Garden of Eden and made it the architecture of shame — original sin, the fall, expulsion, damnation. Cover the body. Name the desire. Punish both. The painters looked at the same garden and saw something else entirely. They saw color. They saw abundance. They saw bodies that deserved to be painted, animals that deserved to be named, light that deserved to fall on everything without exception.

Four hundred and eleven years later, Jupiter 3 has landed in the garden. The pink moon is rising. The oranges — the new forbidden fruit, sweeter and more honest than any apple — are stacked in the foreground. Steve and Brian, not Eve, are here. So is their neighbor Hal, who can do that thing with three oranges. The flamingo stands where the peacock stood. The egret holds the place of the dove. The lush impossible tropical abundance of Brueghel’s botanical imagination has been translated into digital color pushed past its own limit — Mongo-bright, unrepentant, alive.

This is not a commentary on the Rubens and Brueghel. It is a continuation of it. The same paradise, the same unashamed bodies, the same insistence that this world is beautiful and the people in it belong here. The Church said the garden ended with the fall. The artists never left.

Four hundred and eleven years of uninterrupted paradise. Hallelujah.

— Behan

Golden

Friends and Lovers: From Film to Digital, 1985–2025

In 1985, a filmmaker named Ron Pearson (1959–2001) produced, directed, and starred in a gay adult film called Friends and Lovers. The film followed two boyfriends through a day at a spa and gym, documenting the romantic and sexual encounters they had along the way. Director of photography Tom Howard shot it with genuine cinematic intention — careful framing, considered lighting, a visual vocabulary that understood the difference between documentation and filmmaking. Running through the film as a recurring visual metaphor was the weight machine at the gym — its bars and counterweights and mechanical resistance standing in for the rhythms of sex and desire without ever needing to announce itself. That is the work of a cinematographer and a director who understood what images can carry when you trust them.

Friends and Lovers was not unusual for its era. The golden age of gay adult cinema — roughly 1970 through the late 1980s — produced filmmakers with genuine aesthetic signatures. Wakefield Poole. Peter de Rome. William Higgins. Arthur Bressan Jr. These were directors who brought narrative structure, visual design, and thematic intention to work the dominant culture classified as pornography and refused to take seriously. For gay men in that era, these films were not pornography in the pejorative sense. They were the only cinema in which gay men appeared as full human beings — desiring, loved, present, alive. Hollywood was not making those films. The mainstream was not making those films. Ron Pearson was making those films, in a gym, with a cinematographer, and a weight machine that knew exactly what it was saying.

Forty years later, Seth Peterson (1997–2026) was one of the most prominent gay adult content creators working. He rose through Helix Studios, earned multiple industry award nominations, and eventually expanded to OnlyFans, where he produced, directed, and starred in his own work. He could play an entire Beethoven Sonata from memory — not a casual piece, but one of the most technically demanding works in the piano repertoire, requiring years of serious study. That detail matters. It tells you something about the range of creative intelligence and artistic hunger that lived inside a person the dominant culture filed under a single reductive category. What else might he have made, had he lived.

The tradition passes the way traditions always pass — not through conscious inheritance but through the accumulated weight of everyone who did the work before you. Pearson didn’t know Peterson. Peterson almost certainly knew Pearson’s work, or the world that work helped make possible. One man founded his own production house in San Francisco in the 1980s so he could control his own image. Forty years later another man opened an OnlyFans account for exactly the same reason, with different tools, in a world the Ron Pearsons had quietly helped build. That is how a tradition moves forward. Not handed. Carried.

The arc from Ron Pearson to Seth Peterson is forty years. It is also the arc from film to digital, from crew to iPhone, from cinematographer to content creator, from 16mm to OnlyFans. What was gained in that arc is real — autonomy, accessibility, volume, the ability for any gay man anywhere to produce and distribute his own image without a studio, without a distributor, without a gatekeeper. The democratization of the image is not nothing.

What was also lost is worth naming. The collective artistic ambition. The cinematographer in the room. The understanding that the apparatus of filmmaking — the frame, the light, the edit — could itself carry meaning. Ron Pearson used a weight machine as a visual metaphor for sex. That required a director of photography who understood the assignment and a director who trusted the image to do the work without explanation.

The Closet Series archives both men. The collages built from Friends and Lovers place the weight machine, the Aquarian Moon, and Jupiter 3 in conversation with footage from Peterson’s work — traditional filmmaking and digital content creation in the same frame, forty years apart, the same impulse, different apparatus, different world.

From film to digital. From crew to creator. From 1985 to 2025. The tradition continues. The men in it deserve to be seen and acknowledged.

— Behan

H-MSM Part 2 / Digital Photo Collage / 2026

Still heterosexual-identified and still having sex with men. Still bowling on Thursdays.

Sweeeeet.

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State of the Strait

Digital Photo Collage 2026

Totally straight and emotionally unavailable? Straight acting and appearing but deeply embedded in the closet? Gay for pay? Gay baiting? Anti-gay politically and pro-gay on the apps? Straight men are all over the place. Sloppy.

Research confirms what gay men have always known from lived experience. Studies estimate that between 0.5% and 3.5% of men who identify as heterosexual are also having sex with men — a population researchers now formally classify as H-MSM, heterosexual-identified men who have sex with men. Many of these men associate bisexuality with confusion and weakness, equate identifying as gay with vulnerability, and maintain their straight identity primarily to comply with social expectations around family and masculinity. Meanwhile a 2023 longitudinal study found that sexual identity change is bi-directional and ongoing across a lifetime — people move toward and away from LGBTQ+ identities throughout their lives. The emerging diverse sexual world is not a crisis for gay people. It is a crisis for straight men who were told the map was simple and are discovering, app by app, that it never was.

— Behan

You’re the Top

Summer 1978 — The Secaucus Power Bottom 6 step out into the summer rain to greet the Jupiter 3. Chic is considered top tier talent by the guys. He’s coming in for a landing and is going to have his hands full. Only a 10 minute transit to Port Authority and every peep show you could imagine on 42nd Street — Chic and the gang are going to have a fantastic weekend.

Summer 1980– I was there. Just graduating from high school and the world opening up. Everything seemed possible. I can’t ever adequately describe the difference between 1980 and 1981. It was a pandemic earthquake.