Celebrating Trans Day of Visibility
The Great Hall at The Cooper Union has long stood as a forum for LGBTQIA+ voices in the fight for equality. This window exhibition, displayed in the colonnade of the Foundation building proudly celebrates the achievements of Cooper’s transgender, nonbinary, and gender-diverse communities.
The 2015 Cooper Union exhibition, Bring Your Own Body, historicized notions of transgender identity through the lens of the Kinsey Archives.
Justin Vivian Bond making final installation touches at Bring Your Own Body.
Alannah Farrell, The Stalker’s Shadow (Angel, Lower East Side), 2020, oil on canvas, 52 x 64 inches
Alannah Farrell is a queer transgender painter who lives and works in New York. They graduated from The Cooper Union in 2011 and are represented by Harper’s Gallery, New York, and Anat Ebgi Gallery, Los Angeles.
Eli Hill, The Artist as a Naturalist, 2022, oil on canvas, 52 x 64 inches
Eli Hill is an artist living and working in Queens, New York. He graduated from The Cooper Union in 2017 and holds an M.F.A. from Rutgers University. In addition to art-making, Hill is a dedicated educator, writer, New York City Parks steward, and volunteer for Trans Lifeline.
In Spring 2016, The Cooper Union made national news when it became the first college in the country to remove gendered signs from all of its restrooms and replace them with signs indicating only the available lavatory facilities. The change was brought about thanks to Cooper students who advocated to remove gender identifications.
In 2021, The Cooper Union celebrated Indigenous Peoples’ Day with a Great Hall performance entitled We Will Always Be Here, featuring Grammy Award–winning musician, artist, educator, and dancer Ty Defoe (Giizhig). Defoe, who is from the Oneida and Ojibwe Nations, identifies as two-spirit and interweaves his artistic projects with social justice, indigeneity, trans rights, and Indigi-Queering.
Lynn Conway is an internationally recognized advocate for trans rights who led a revolution in microchip design in Silicon Valley in the late 1970s—advances that are credited with making cell phones and laptops possible. Yet as she showed in her 2020 virtual Great Hall lecture, innovations by women, people of color, and LGBTQIA+ people often “disappear” from the histories of technology and science.
A member of Kinding Sindaw performs as part of the 2022 EstroGenius Festival, an annual celebration of
the artistry of femme, non-binary, non-conforming, and trans womxn artists produced by Melissa Riker and
Maura Nguyen Donohue.New York City legend, comedian, and international entertainer Murray Hill will host Shine On: A Concert for Trans Day of Visibility.
Trailblazing actress, singer, DJ, reality star, and activist Peppermint will be a featured artist at Shine On:
A Concert for Trans Day of Visibility.In 1980, the New York City Gay Men’s Chorus performed their debut concert for a standing-room only audience in the Great Hall at The Cooper Union. We are proud to welcome them back to the Great Hall stage for a live performance in honor of International Transgender Day of Visibility.
