T-Shirt Collection

About the collection

Lesbian and gay political t-shirts were a common sight throughout the late 1980’s and 90’s. From ‘Nobody Knows I’m a Lesbian,’ to ‘Dike – just do her’, they were used by activists to literally wear their sexuality on their sleeves.

The fashion sprang from the 1987 Silence = Death campaign produced by the graphic design collective Gran Fury. They put Aids activism on the map with their ACT UP (Aids Coalition to Unleash Power) t-shirts and posters featuring bold, uppercase lettering and an upside-down pink triangle. The triangle was a reappropriation of the visual marker forcibly worn by gay men in WW2 Nazi concentration camps. (Gender non-conforming people and lesbians wore black triangles.)

It'd be a rare sight today to see someone coming out in Soho in sans serif. So the current popularity of trans rights t-shirts indicates the trans struggle to be comparatively lagging 40 years behind the wider lesbian and gay movement… Despite evidence that trans people have always been at the forefront of the Global North’s queer resistance movement.

Their popularity also demonstrates how deeply tied LGB history is to transcestry.

White T-shirt with handwritten text "TRANS LIVES IN PRISON COUNT" in red and blue and hand drawn red curly barbed wire with black 'x's.
Trans in Prison T-Shirt

MOT/2024/NDOTC/LEED/025

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A black sleeveless T-shirt with "VIOLENT THEMMES" in pink text.
Violent Themmes Vest

MOT001171

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A white t-shirt with colorful illustrations and positive messages hangs on a wooden hanger.
White T-Shirt "Trans Pride MCR"

MOT/2024/NDOTC/MANC/019

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A white T-shirt features a quote in red handwriting and a small handwritten cardboard tag.
White T-Shirt With Handwriting

MOT000018

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A white vest.
White Vest Top

MOT000017

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Item details

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