The Exhibit In Detail
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Don Paulson – Gay Historian
Vashon Island’s Don Paulson (1933-2011) poetically invites people into the IN AND OUT exhibit with his poem RIVER OF GOLD, calligraphed by bell artist Gordon R Barnett. It was written in the early 2000’s to express his joy with queer acceptance.
Artist Don Paulson was Mr. Gay History Seattle, but he was more than that. His curiosity was insatiable, and he recorded his life and others’ in paintings, drawings, books, letters and archives now housed at the University of Washington and the Museum of History and Industry.
Paulson penned the Seattle Gay History Column for Seattle Gay News for many years, chronicling gay life mostly through interviews with people who frequented such queer locales as the Garden of Allah (1947-1957), South End Steam Baths (1892-1998), and the Double Header bar in Pioneer Square.
A contributor to the Northwest Lesbian & Gay History Museum Project, he interviewed iconic drag queens and helped assemble maps and resources so LGBTQ people would not forget their roots. He had his own gay feelings at 9 or 10, and devoted his life to social justice and equality, as a participant in such organizations as the revolutionary feminist Freedom Socialists and Black & White Men Together.
Shelly’s Leg Disco Ball
In addition to Shelly’s Leg, this disco ball graced the dance floor at Tugs Belmont on Capitol Hill in Seattle, where Madonna danced under it when she was in town to shoot “A League of their Own.” Earlier, when it hung at Tootsie’s Vintage Clothing Store, it’s said that k.d. lang, Curt Cobain, Courtney Love, Chris Isaac, Wynona Ryder, Joe Jackson, and Dale Chihuly shopped under it. Many thanks to Gordon Tribble for the loan. (The ball has lived on Vashon for many years, in Gordon’s grandmother’s attic.)
Goddess Ravenna Ravine
Since 1989, a collection of Northwest Creatives have enacted the ritual marriage of the Goddess Ravenna Ravine and the God Greenlake on the first Sunday of May. The Beltane ritual ends with a Maypole dance.
Each year there’s a different Goddess (sometimes a man, sometimes a woman), who plans the year’s ritual.
Michael Red Earth (pictured left) was the Goddess in 1999. Other Vashonites have also manifested the Goddess: Robert Seay and Jennifer Hawke.
In the years since the ritual began, the City of Seattle has daylighted much of the formerly buried stream that runs from Greenlake to Lake Washington through the ravine.