![music box gay bar nyc music box gay bar nyc](https://gaycities-listing-images-production.imgix.net/originals/bars-3431-Music-Box-headhoncho-1569f.jpg)
![music box gay bar nyc music box gay bar nyc](https://www.nycgo.com/images/uploads/articles/Queens_Nightlife/Albatross-Bar-Astoria-Queens-NYC-tross2.jpg)
Eve Adams (or Addams), a Polish Jew, opened a lesbian speakeasy and tea room in 1925. The earliest known site Shockey uncovered is Eve’s Hangout. That vanguard of queer culture discontinued its print edition on Sept. She then framed and hanged them against a backdrop of the second-to-last print issue of the Village Voice. Each digital print contains a photo of the current location where the bar once stood, and explanatory text quoting news sources, such as the Times, Go magazine and Gay News. “When you’re standing there, surrounded by all these images, of what once were queer gathering spaces, there’s power in that.”Īddresses remaps the city according to these epicenters of queer gathering. So far, she’s verified 46 sites that will be displayed chronologically. She then made a list of almost 100 lesbian bars lost in time. She combed through hundreds of party invitations, memoirs and films, archived at the NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project and the Lesbian Herstory Archives. She came across as a Lewis and Clark-like explorer of No Man’s Land, wearing a green windbreaker and brown cowboy boots. Shockey and I met outside Cubbyhole in mid-October. She uncovers almost a century’s worth of lesbian herstory through photographs accompanied by back issues of the Village Voice and audio interviews. These forgotten watering holes, many of which have been razed or repurposed into restaurants, will resurface in her solo show Addresses, which opened today at Amos Eno Gallery in Bushwick. “But this place has held up.” Camera in hand, she’s been documenting the history of lesbian bars like Cubbyhole – one of four sites still standing in the five boroughs.Ĭompelled by this changing landscape, the 29-year-old wanted to make the invisible lesbian bar scene visible again. They are mostly straight white families with a lot of wealth,” she says, sitting across Cubbyhole in mid-October. “On Sundays, you get a true sense of who is now living in these neighborhoods. That’s what queer artist Gwen Shockey saw during her Sunday morning excursions. Outside, though, you’re crashed back into the touristy, suburban feel of the West Village. Inside, fizzy pop tunes reverberate against $2 happy hours and a ceiling covered with paper holiday ornaments. Since 1994, Cubbyhole has been a kitsch haven for the city’s LGBT community.