Anita Bryant Monuments — 4 February to 4 March 2023
Anita Bryant Monuments
Troy-Anthony Baylis
4 February – 4 March 2023
Exhibition launch
Saturday 11 February at 2 pm
Remarks from Richard Perram OAM
Introductions by Daniel Clarke, Festival Creative Director, WorldPride Arts
PDF: Opening remarks by Richard Perram OAM
Conversation: ‘Hate speech and the legacy of Anita Bryant’
Tuesday 28 February, 1-2pm
Troy-Anthony Baylis with Dane Wilden (Manager, South Australia’s History Festival)
The Cross Art Projects in association with Sydney WorldPride presents Anita Bryant Monuments – an exhibition by Troy-Anthony Baylis.
Anita Bryant is an American singer, beauty pageant queen, Florida orange juice ambassador, and one of the most famous American anti-gay rights activists of the late 1960s and 1970s. Through an installation of collages and a site-specific work Anita Bryant Monuments responds to the legacy of her mass-media anti-gay propaganda.
The collages are constructed of Anita Bryant record sleeves and quotes in the form of adhesive stickers as well as responsive appliqued photography of the artist in drag. The site-specific temporary ‘monument’ references the 1978 San Francisco Pride Parade and the 1978 Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras.
Perhaps piggy-backing British tabloid journalism of the 1950s and early 1960s whereby homophobia and fearmongering was published in popular newspaper media, Bryant used mass media including television, radio, newsprint, and organised political propaganda to campaign against equal rights for non-heterosexual people. The oppressive rhetoric of bigotry and homophobia replicated itself within Australian media and flourished within dominant mainstream culture, contributing to same-sex-attracted people, including the artist, experiencing intense feelings of isolation and self-loathing.
“Instead of eradicating Anita Bryant from existence, maybe mimicking a Christian history of book burnings to cancel ‘the work of the devil’, I want to remember her. Not without casualties, I recognise the irony of Anita Bryant promoting homosexuality to the masses. In the contemporary context of cancel culture ideology, permitting Anita Bryant’s words as monumental, I am asserting a kind of voice the anti-gay activist had sought to silence, to make invisible, to extinguish” – Troy-Anthony Baylis
This exhibition is part of Sydney WorldPride 2023: www.sydneyworldpride.com
Kaboobie making camp amongst a display of Anita Bryant Monuments, Hugo Michell Gallery, Adelaide, 2 November 2021. Photo: Dane Wilden
Troy-Anthony Baylis, Anita Bryant Monument 3, 2021. Die-cut stickers on paper record-sleeve
Troy-Anthony Baylis, Anita Bryant Monument 1, 2021. Die-cut stickers on paper record-sleeve
Photo: Dane Wilden
Troy-Anthony Baylis, Anita Bryant Monuments, 2023. Photo by Silversalt Photography
Troy-Anthony Baylis, Anita Bryant Monuments, 2023. Photo by Silversalt Photography
L to R: Troy-Anthony Baylis, Anita Bryant Monument (retort) [white], Anita Bryant Monument (retort) [gold], Anita Bryant Monument (retort) [turquoise], all 2023, die-cut stickers on photograph. Photograph: Silversalt.
Troy-Anthony Baylis, Anita Bryant Monuments, 2023, (Installation). Photo by Silversalt Photography
L to R: Troy-Anthony Baylis, Anita Bryant Monument 5, 2021, die-cut stickers on paper record sleeves autographed by Anita Bryant. Anita Bryant Monument 2, 2020. Anita Bryant Monument 8, 2022. Anita Bryant Monument 6, 2021, all die-cut stickers on paper record sleeves. Photography: Silversalt
Troy-Anthony Baylis, Anita Bryant Monuments, 2023, (installation). Photo by Silversalt Photography
(L): Troy Anthony-Baylis, Anita Bryant Monument 1, 2020, die-cut stickers on paper record sleeve. (R): Troy Anthony-Baylis, Anita Bryant Monument (liar, liar), 2022, die-cut stickers on paper record sleeves. Photo by Silversalt Photography
(L): Troy Anthony-Baylis, Anita Bryant Monument 3, 2021, die-cut stickers on paper record sleeves. (R): Troy Anthony-Baylis, Anita Bryant Monument 3 [negative], 2021, die-cut stickers on paper record sleeves. Photo: Silversalt
Troy Anthony-Baylis, Anita Bryant Monument 1, 2020, die-cut stickers on paper record sleeve. Photo: Silversalt.
Troy-Anthony Baylis, Anita Bryant Monuments, 2023, (installation). Photo by Silversalt Photography
Troy-Anthony Baylis, Anita Bryant Monuments, 2023, (installation). Photo by Silversalt Photography
The opening launch of Troy-Anthony Baylis’ “Anita Bryant Monuments”, on Saturday 11 February in association with Sydney WorldPride.
The Cross Art Projects extends sincere thanks to esteemed curator Richard Perram OAM, Daniel Clarke (Festival Creative Director, WorldPride Arts), & Ben Graetz (Festival Creative Director) for their engaging and insightful comments.
Cinematography by Gary Carsley and Renjie Teoh
Video editing by Kim Scott, Moon Cube Design
Ratings and Warnings
Contains historical mass-media published hate speech about homosexuality that have had harmful effects on generations of people, specifically LGBTQIA+ people.
The artist gratefully acknowledges the Australia Council for the Arts for the generous project support.
Links & Downloads
Troy-Anthony Baylis’ musical theatre, Art Guide, October 2021 > https://artguide.com.au/troy-anthony-baylis-musical-theatre/
Troy-Anthony Baylis: Yes I am Musical, VAULT Art & Culture, Sex Issue 38, 2022 > Download as pdf