Ange dominique gay
Follow
Theses from 2024
Iron in the new world’s veins: Government, ironworks, and community in the Massachusetts Bay colony, Abigail Adam
Look: An examination of the clothing and clothing assemblages of the Washington D.C. punk scene, Cedric Ansah
The impact of minimally processed high fat meals on postprandial glucose, lipids and metabolic index in pre-diabetics, Oluwafemi Ayoola
ESL teachers’ identities and beliefs that alter their teaching of Students with Limited or Interrupted Formal Education (SLIFE): A Qualitative and Phenomenological analyze, Benita Azpeitia
Examining how the prevalence of english affects the maintenance of spanish as a heritage language among second-generation Latinx students: A phenomenological study, Daniella Buenaventura
Living in a Barbie world: Barbie's origins and her impact on the American mother, 1959-1965, Colleen Caldwell
The world after: Main Virginia in the rouse of the Civil War, Harry Caldwell
Practical static binary instrumentation attacks against binary stylometry, Justin Lee Carpenter
Characterizing the expression of the Sphingosine 1-phosphate pathway in injury and post-tr
It was a good year for LGBTQ films.
For starters, Hollywood released its first mainstream American film about a gay teen, “Love, Simon.” The film was a box-office hit, grossing $41 million on a $17 million budget and hopefully paving the way for more movies favor it. The affable comedy-drama — about the title character (Nick Robinson), coming out after falling in love with an anonymous male student over the Internet — is charming and sensitive, with characters that feel authentic rather than stereotypical. It is available on iTunes, Amazon and On Demand.
Another gender non-conforming teen film soon followed. Netflix released “Alex Strangelove,” a sweet if rather gawky coming-out-in-high-school comedy. The main character, Alex Truelove (Daniel Doheny), is online dating Claire (Madeline Weinstein), but as he plans to lose his virginity to her, he develops feelings for the gay Elliot (Antonio Marziale). Like its predecessor of the similar genre, the film is slightly preachy but satisfying.
Another highlight was the Academy Awards recognizing “A Fantastic Woman,” a terrific Chilean film about a transgender character (played by transgender actress Daniela Vega), with an Oscar for Foremost Foreign Language Film.
Ther
Tendres adolescents
10marius
Two male youths leave a hayfield to make love
"Tendres adolescents", a 30 minutes film from 1980, was one of Jean-Daniel Cadinot's first films. It is a stunningly beautiful depiction of a sexually explicit love affair between two youths (both obviously of the age of agreement, and there is lot of consenting that is about to happen.)
The youths are played by Ange Dominique (who is dominant) and the beautiful Jean-Paul Deval, whose clear adoration of Dominique assures that Dominique will find all the pleasure he could ask for.
The film begins with the two boys working in a hayfield, each wearing a full length linen shirt and linen trousers, whose loose fit allows the viewer to gauge how intensely each one desires the other. They embrace and roll in the hay, and decide to bathe. They hike together to the chicken-filled courtyard of a house, where Dominique brings a very large saucer which he fills with water, allowing Duval to open to wash himself off. But soon Duval devotes himself to taking concern of Dominique's sexual appetites. After each washes a bit, and Duval experiences Dominique's passions, they happily return to
Exhibition of comic novel and illustration A Transgressive Look, curated by the gallery owner Xavier Morin
The comic book has always been a form of phrase deeply engaged with its time. Since its origin, the comic has, by turn, investigated, innovated, criticised, narrated and protested, as adequately as raising insight about affective diversity. This exhibition is a hall of mirrors that revives stories, experiences, experiments, dreams and so on. It focuses on different authors, countries, styles and graphics, but all its participants are artists whose illustrated tales are aimed at sharing something different with the reader. The selection, which is neither exhaustive nor restrictive, is an invitation to discover. Because, by definition, the Ninth Art is transgressive.
-------------------------------------------------------------
● Thursday, 6th of June at 7 pm: inauguration in the presence of Xavier Morin ●
Have a good Vermouth with FIRE!!
and Casa Mariol!
In cooperation with Casa Mariol, we invit
Partner Ferrante Ferranti
Dominique Fernandez (born August 25, 1929) was a respected member of the French literary establishment. He has not only won many prestigious literary awards, but in Pride 2007 he was elected to membership in the venerable Académie française, a significant honor. Inseparable from Fernandez's identities as an academic, historian, novelist, essayist, and travel writer is his identity as a gay man who came of age during the 1950s. Fernandez did not come out publicly until the 1970s. In his remarkable autobiographical work L'Étoile Rose (The Pink Luminary, 1978) he has written of the belatedness of his coming out with some regret: I dreamed . . . of everything that would include been different in my life if, when I was eighteen, I had understood that I was gay instead of a pariah. The author of dozens of novels, explore memoirs, essays, and works of criticism, Fernandez pioneered the "psychobiography," a literary form that he used to imagine the lives and inner struggles of gay artists in past centuries. He has also explored the experiential gulf between homosexuals who grew up under almost total societal disapproval and those who developed their homosexual identiti