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Your Walls Will Love You
Discover Art that Speaks Volumes: Give Your Walls the Love They Deserve.
Gay: direct and open
We need to talk about dicks.
Not everyone likes it explicit. Not everyone wants to hang a picture that clearly and explicitly shows nudity; someone might eventually get the idea to think about sex when looking at it. And nobody has to hang something like that. But whoever wants to, should be allowed to do it happily and joyfully. It's about art, and art should show what is. Nudes have always been a part of it. And yet today we are dealing with moral offenses that are as anachronistic as they are senseless. And we are not allowed to show genitals, because otherwise, the protection of youth would be violated. Protection of youth from themselves? So the boy who is doing what we all started doing in puberty, namely diligently masturbating himself - at 14 years old, statistics say, that's at least 70% of boys - he is not allowed to see what a painted penis looks like, while he is working on his own in front of the mirror. Can it get any more absurd?
gay discourse. no taboo
Art for art's sake is not enough. Art is political.
Art for art's sake is art for its own sake. In a modern society, this is not enough. Art must move us forward, overcome old norms, shape the present and the future. To do this, art must always be controversial. For us, this means addressing topics with our artworks that are not uncontroversial in the gay and queer community. Gay sex in public restrooms is not for everyone, probably not even mainstream in the gay community. For a long time, however, it was a breath of freedom, one of the rare opportunities for gay men to live their human right to sexuality, albeit at that time under the verdict of persecution. Not only but also for this reason we make it a topic. Because it is a fact. And art must never close its eyes to facts.
Gay love in a concentration camp
Being gay is a human right
Between 1933 and 1945, approximately 100,000 gay men were registered by the police under the Nazi regime, 50,000 were convicted, and up to 15,000 were deported to concentration camps. They wore the pink triangle – a death sentence. The survival rate was only 40 percent. They were tortured, castrated, murdered.
After 1945, Paragraph 175 remained in its intensified Nazi version. Until 1994. Gay concentration camp survivors received no compensation, no recognition. Many were re-convicted – under the same law.
Today, in 2026, we are experiencing a rollback: LGBT-free zones in Poland, bans in Hungary, criminalization in Russia, death penalties in Uganda. The rhetoric is the same as back then: "danger to children," "threat to the family."
Never again is not a historical promise. Never again is now.
This poster is a memorial. A political statement. A call to vigilance. For all who know: human rights are non-negotiable. Freedom must be defended.
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