I donated Uneditioned Print of Brodalisque Reclining in the Garage to the 3rd Annual TPAN Fundraising Gala on March 7th in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. The Transformation Project Advocacy Network advocates for the dignity and well-being of transgender South Dakotans. My artwork is part of their auction, and you can bid online.

https://givebutter.com/c/TPAN2025/auction/items/829191

#brodalisque #transformationproject

2025 TPAN Gala

Advocating for the dignity and well-being of transgender South Dakotans

The Transformation Project, Inc.

Wouldn’t this tiny bro look great hanging on your wall? You can bid on my art in the online auction supporting the Transformation Project Advocacy Network. This is a miniature reproduction print of my painting titled Brodalisque Reclining in the Garage. It’s enclosed in an ostentatious faux-gold frame that I built as a joke to reference over-the-top presentations of classic figure paintings. Bidding closes March 7th.

https://givebutter.com/c/TPAN2025/auction/items/829191

#brodalisque #transformationproject #art

2025 TPAN Gala

Advocating for the dignity and well-being of transgender South Dakotans

The Transformation Project, Inc.
Funds raised through the show will benefit the #ACLUofTennessee, #TransformationProject, #TennesseeEqualityProject and Chicago’s own #LifeisWork, a #Black- and #trans-led #organization on the #WestSide

The kʷiisḥinčiƛ: Transformation project is committed to continuing strength-based and culturally-grounded work for and with Indigenous women. Its base funding has come from WHRP’s CIHR Foundation Grant and its objective is to carry out research and knowledge translation driven by Indigenous women living with HIV.

https://caan.ca/research/current-research/the-transformation-project/

#TransformationProject #caan #hiv #canada #kʷiisḥinčiƛ

Claudette Cardinal’s Indigenous name is Wâpakwaniy, which in Cree translates to flower. Claudette is an Indigenous Peer Research Associate at the British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS – and she is also an Indigenous woman who has been living with HIV for over two decades.

Some of the knowledge that Indigenous people bring to the fight with HIV/AIDS, says Wâpakwaniy, “is the healing properties, that love that comes from the energy.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TpOj4CfX0mk

#TransformationProject

Global Lessons, Local Actions: Claudette Cardinal

YouTube