NOTHING NEW
An Installation & Art Catalog of Immigrant & Queer Artists curated by Bushra Gill & Jason Wyman / Queerly Complex
Featuring
Addy Gravatte ✶ Alan Tello ✶ Alvin Ortiz ✶ Amirra Malak ✶ Andrea Fuenzalida ✶ Angelica Full Moon ✶ Anita Sulimanovic ✶ Areem Rose ✶ Arthur Jackson V ✶ Ash Phillips ✶ Badri Valian ✶ BEARPAD (Patrick Stephenson & Jordan Fickel) ✶ Bushra Gill ✶ Crystal Mason ✶ Daniel Tofach ✶ Davey Faye ✶ David Maldonado ✶ Desiree Darling, Tiana McGuire & Lindsey Kincaid ✶ Devon Devine ✶ Dorian Katz ✶ eli vasquez ✶ Elizabeth Estrada ✶ Elle Lim-Chan ✶ Gerardo Gama ✶ Ginger Yifan Chen ✶ Gisela Insuaste ✶ Hamza Kubba ✶ Idalia Ramos ✶ Jacquelyn Salgado ✶ Jason Wyman / Queerly Complex ✶ Jasper R. Rush ✶ Jaylene Cabrera ✶ Jeremiah Pfeffer ✶ Julian Parikh ✶ Kateryna Ferman ✶ Katina Papson ✶ Kevin McDonald ✶ Kevin Simmonds ✶ Kirthi Nath ✶ Koko G ✶ Lea McGeever ✶ Lena Lee ✶ Lesha Maria Rodriguez ✶ Marcella Sanchez ✶ Marin Carr-Quimet ✶ Mark McBeth ✶ Mason J ✶ Michael Kerschner ✶ Midori ✶ Neut ✶ Nitya Narasimhan ✶ Peter Max Lawrence ✶ Retura ✶ Rhea Joseph ✶ Sabriaya Shipley ✶ Scott Sessions ✶ somer taylor ✶ Soni Laughlin ✶ Stellan Knowles ✶ Taneesh Kaur ✶ Taryn Kearns ✶ Vera Ostroumova ✶ Vic Welle ✶ Wang Yiming ✶ Wasay ✶ YouBeen Kim
with a special pop-up fundraiser by SF Artists for Palestine
Curatorial Statement
Immigrants and Queers have been, are, and will always be here. There is no past nor future without us. We exist because people move by force, necessity, and (sometimes) choice, and sexuality / gender are complex (not binary), regardless of what dominant society legislates or social norms dictate. Our positionality to domination affirms our struggles are linked. We are comrades, and this is NOTHING NEW.
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Frequently, in times of political upheaval, art, stories, songs, dances, rituals, and traditions become targets of erasure. It is a form of censorial annihilation meant to ensure future generations know little to nothing about their forebears. For if even a breadcrumb were to remain, our descendants will have the tools to liberate their beings from domination. This, too, is NOTHING NEW.
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Right here, right now we – Immigrant and / or Queer Artists – are under direct political attack. Co-creating tactics and ways to gather, preserve, and promulgate our art, stories, songs, dances, and rituals is a means of survival, organizing, and resistance. It is a tradition we have always done for gathering our people together around the fire to talk story is NOTHING NEW.
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Immgrant and / or Queer Artists of any discipline / practice / tradition from anywhere in the world were invited to submit NO NEW WORKS and NO NEW WORDS. Every artist submitted ONE 8.5” by 11” work, an 150 word bio, artwork context, and how to find them online, in print, or in the material world. There was no submission fee.
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Calls were put out on social media and through various networks. All who submitted and met the criteria were accepted into the show. 66 artists submitted work. All met the criteria, and all were accepted in the Installation and Art Catalog.
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NOTHING NEW is an Installation & Art Catalog curated by Bushra Gill & Jason Wyman / Queerly Complex celebrating over 60 Immigrant and / or Queer artists of diverse cultures, traditions, practices, disciplines, generations, and origins.
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The inaugural Installation will be held at the new 465 Collective Space (465 S. Van Ness, SF), located in the landmark Femina Potens art gallery and performance space, which was dedicated to showcasing work by women and trans artists and operated from 2002 to 2007. It will also include a pop-up shop by SF Artists for Palestine with all proceeds going directly to Palestinians impacted by the genocide.
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Physical and digital catalogs of the Installation will be archived in places like the Internet Archive, zine archives, and cultural, public, or educational institutions as a means of ensuring records of Immigrant and / or Queer Artists coming together in times of political attack survive for future generations to find. The Catalog and Installation includes a Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Noderivatives 4.0 Deed, meaning others are free to print and install the digital prints as is within the catalog for non-commercial purposes with proper attribution, which is included in the catalog. Additionally, the digital catalogs are formatted in letter size to ensure easy printing and installation of the works in other localities.
About the Curators
![A photo of Bushra Gill wearing a lavendar hijab smiling and making art.](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/630e41_0ce9761782b44dc4b0cceb8adf1fdf52~mv2.jpg/v1/fill/w_355,h_355,al_c,q_80,usm_0.66_1.00_0.01,enc_avif,quality_auto/630e41_0ce9761782b44dc4b0cceb8adf1fdf52~mv2.jpg)
Bushra Gill
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Bushra Gill finds order within the chaos of everyday life through art.
She was born in Karachi, Pakistan, and emigrated to Houston, Texas, with her family as a small child. Drawn to art from a young age, she graduated from Pratt Institute in 1994 with a BFA in sculpture. She has been awarded residencies at Pilchuck Glass School and Kala Art Institute.
Gill spent many years of working as a museum educator at various galleries and museums including The Museum of Modern Art, The Drawing Center and The Rotunda Gallery, while also working as a studio assistant to various artists including Maya Lin, Ursula von Rydingsvard, and Maria Elena Gonzalez. Currently living and working in northern California, Gill also serves on the board of Oakland Art Murmur and curates exhibitions.
![A photos of Jason Wyman / Queerly Complex wearing clown makeup staring out a window.](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/630e41_407fb0486d254e96880b0955aaee3219~mv2.jpg/v1/fill/w_355,h_355,al_c,q_80,usm_0.66_1.00_0.01,enc_avif,quality_auto/PXL_20240630_021757220_edited.jpg)
Jason Wyman​​
Jason Wyman is Queerly Complex, an anti-binary social practice artist living & creating on Yelamu, unceded Ramaytush Ohlone land or what colonizers named San Francisco. A mystical convener, Wyman creates spaces for comrades to explore & discover who they be individually & collectively. They work with dreams, value(s), structures, & equity to conjure forms of liberation & healing. Wyman’s art-making centers the messy, intangible, emotive, & esoteric bits that make us human.
It’s resulted the Immigrant Artist Network co-founded with Rupy C. Tut, Tree of Change co-founded with Crystal Mason, and the Culture Tending Collective & Commons co-founded with with Crystal Mason, Vanessa Rodrigue Minero, and Wendy Martinez-Morroquin.
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Wyman is also a Founding Member of the 465 Collective.
![Image by Andrew Kliatskyi](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/nsplsh_40b562d595de41cfad3703ad7adfcdf9~mv2.jpg/v1/fill/w_474,h_843,al_c,q_85,usm_0.66_1.00_0.01,enc_avif,quality_auto/nsplsh_40b562d595de41cfad3703ad7adfcdf9~mv2.jpg)
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0 License
Nothing New - February 15 to March 16, 2025 © 2025 by
is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
Resource List
The resources for immigrant and / or queer communities provided below were submitted by artists from Nothing New.
Center for Empowering Refugees and Immigrants
CERI is a trusted Bay Area organization that supports immigrants with a multitude of services including mental health.
Legal assistance and referral resource for LGBTQ+ immigrants.
The LGBT Asylum Project is the only San Francisco nonprofit organization exclusively dedicated to providing accessible legal representation for LGBT asylum seekers who are fleeing persecution due to their sexual orientation, gender identity and/or HIV status.
The Trans Literature Preservation Project: A Practical Guide to Resisting Censorship
An incredible resource on the why, what, and how of creating a personal archive for literature that will come under direct political attack.
An app that will help you get prepared against deportation. Recommended by a dear comrade who has done immigrant organizing along the border.
Immigrant Defense Project - Know Your Rights
Multilingual Know Your Rights with ICE explainers.
Supporting a Trans Friend in Crisis: What you can do instead of calling 988 or 911
Short guide from Trans Lifeline with links to further resources.
Thrive Lifeline Non-Carceral Resource List
List of support lines, peer support, and other non-carceral resources for mental health crisis support that does not involve forced treatment.
"Online directory of local resources available as alternatives to calling the police or 911."