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In Visible Ink at the National Theatre (Image: NT Graphic Design Studio)

In Visible Ink at the National Theatre (Image: NT Graphic Design Studio)

National Theatre presents In Visible Ink

First Published 14 June 2017, Last Updated 14 June 2017

The National Theatre presents its newest exhibition, In Visible Ink, tracing a timeline of some of the key political, social and cultural events and stories that have impacted the LGBT+ community over the past 25 years.

Marking 25 years since the premiere of Angels In America at the NT, the exhibition will feature contributions from people at the National, giving personal recollections of moments in history that have impacted them.

As part of the exhibition visitors will be invited to use a pair of decoder glasses to reveal obscured comments left on the timeline by contributors. A film will play alongside the timeline, displaying contributors holding up the name of someone from the LGBT+ community who has been an inspiration to them.

There will then be the opportunity for visitors to make their own mark and add the name of their own ‘Queer Hero’ to a board.

The exhibition is part of the NT’s previously announced Queer Theatre event series, marking 50 years since the partial decriminalisation of homosexuality in England and Wales. The series looks at how theatre has charted the LGBT+ experience through a series of rehearsed readings in the Lyttelton Theatre, 6-10 July.

Curator Hester Chillingworth said: “In Visible Ink is about proudly and hyper-visibly marking out moments from LGBT+ history – travesties as well as triumphs – within the public space of the NT, for people to see and learn about. It is also, vitally, about individuals’ experiences and unique voices, and how sometimes, if we don’t have the time, the energy or the inclination, we can find ourselves choosing not to really see or hear what (or who) is right in front of us.”

“I’m hoping the exhibition presents a fun way to engage with this provocation, as it (literally) offers viewers some new lenses to see things through.”

For more information on the Queer Theatre event series, click here.

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