AIDS awareness meets trading cards

Visual AIDS, a New York-based artist collective that works to educate people about HIV and AIDS, recently asked photographers to collaborate on a collection of trading cards called Play Smart. Each card is packaged along with a condom, lube, a sticker and information on HIV and AIDS based on harm-reduction models.

Amos Mac, the publisher of Original Plumbing, a magazine about and for FTM trans men, is one of the photographers for the series. “I believe that art is a vector for understanding, which is why I so admire and respect the work of Visual AIDS,” says Mac on the website. “It is my hope that these images will help spark some crucial discussions about sex, gender, safety and fun.” Amos was interviewed for Xtra in February of this year.

Another artist is Christopher Schulz, he of Pinups and SETH fame (links NSFW). One of his models is Graham Kolbeins, who has been featured in Xtra as well as on this blog. Schulz wrote on the site that “I’ve admired Visual AIDS for quite some time and was thrilled to be invited to contribute to the brilliant PLAY SMART project. It is an honor to be able to help spread such an important message of HIV prevention and AIDS awareness alongside such talented artists.”

***

Finally, it is the weekend — time for your weekly office dance party. This week it’s thanks to Azealia Banks and DJ Cosmo (who used to hail from Halifax) and a recent mixtape. It features Banks’s “212” and Zebra Katz’s “Ima Read,” two of my fave tracks right now.

Journalist, writer, blogger, producer.

Keep Reading

Inside TransCare+, a new Canadian directory of trans health resources

This new site site aims to be the one-stop shop for Canadian trans healthcare
Two shirtless larger bodies from the waist up, seen from behind; one has their arm around the other.

Bud scars and bodies in queer middle age 

Most people gain weight as they age, a fact with a particular heaviness in body-obsessed gay male culture

What you need need to know about gender-affirming care for youth

What sort of healthcare is available? Do parents have any say? Is the healthcare safe and effective?

Could this week’s Supreme Court abortion pill case affect gender-affirming care?

OPINION: The Comstock Act, a 150-year-old federal obscenity law, has advocates on edge