Tag Archives: DAN NICOLETTA

RECIPROCAL RECOMMENDATIONS AND FREE PUBLICITY


I’d like to invite you to write a brief recommendation of my work that I can include in my LinkedIn profile. You will need to be a member of Linkedin to do this.

MY PROFILE IS HERE: http://uk.linkedin.com/pub/david-equality-watters/23/371/95b

 

Alternatively an endorement for my website would be appreciated and this can be emailed to DavidWatters@nbiassociates.co.uk

I will gladly reciprocate and endorse the work that you do. Top quotes will also be featured on http://www.nbiassociates.co.uk with a link to your site.

Thanks in advance for helping me out. DAVID EQUALITY WATTERS

YOU CAN ENDORSE ME AS A WRITER, PUBLIC SPEAKER OR WORKSHOP PROVIDER – HOWEVER YOU KNOW ME BEST.

LINKS:

WRITING: http://www.ambiente.us/05509JohnAmaechi.html (JOHN AMAECHI)

http://www.ambiente.us/010011Trevor.html (THE TREVOR PROJECT)

PUBLIC SPEAKINGhttp://www.nbiassociates.co.uk/Motivational-Speaking.html

WORKSHOPShttp://www.nbiassociates.co.uk/default.html

 

David was recently profiled on 10,000 Couples as Someone You Should Know:
Since graduating from The Institute of Education, University of London, David has gone on to train with LEAP, as a mediator, and is a qualified facilitator for The Pacific Institute.  He is a writer on social inequality issues, is a key player in the Equal Love Campaign UK and author of the forthcoming book, NEVER BLEND IN which supports and is supported by the Trevor Project and theHarvey Milk Foundation, features key voices from the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender community including Stephen Fry, Colton Ford, Mike Ruiz, Calpernia Addams, Alan Cumming, Darren Hayes, Lt. Dan Choi, LGBT Olympic athletes, actors, politicians, military, firefighters, Harvey Milk colleagues (Anne Kronenberg, Tom Ammiano and Dan Nicoletta) and has a foreword by Stuart Milk.

This groundbreaking book aims to inspire and encourage those who may lack self-belief or who question their validity.
David is also currently promoting a youtube campaign, “Give ‘em Hope”, and is asking individuals, couples and groups to make and share videos telling about the benefits of living with personal authenticity.
He has shared a platform with Stuart Milk and Peter Tatchell and is a supporter of 17-24-30, The Trevor Project, Schools Out, The Harvey Milk Foundation and has great admiration for the WHOF initiative and all the brave members of this group who speak out against the prejudice and bigotry in our society.
ENDORSEMENTS
COPYRIGHT NOTICE © TEXT & IMAGES

I think that out of everyone in society LGBT people, especially LGBT youth, are subjected to most negative energy and the most negative portrayals of themselves and so it’s really important for us as a community to give back and to let people see that the sun can shine
ALAN CUMMING

Stuart Milk, nephew of Harvey Milk and Equality Advocate, has said: “I love your work, which is vital to show the richness of embracing and celebrating our wonderful diversity. As Harvey would say, you’re bringing medicine into the world that the world needs! Thank you!”

He (Harvey Milk) had great confidence in me; I really felt that the basic message was “you can do it”. He was a cheerleader first and then he would deconstruct content second. I think there was always this attention to helping somebody really feel that they can make their way.

If you look at his speeches that’s there; there’s really this broad stroke that’s about positivity and confidence so you’re on the right path in terms of carrying on his work that way.


DAN NICOLETTA

PETER TATCHELL
For young people coming to terms with their sexuality it’s really important that they have positive, high achieving role models as a way of boosting their self esteem and confidence. This kind of book shares the experience of a very diverse group of LGBT people. Individual and collective experience offers the inspiration and motivation for LGBT people to do something worthwhile with their lives and live their dream.

There are two ways you can approach not fitting in.  If you get to see it as a blessing, feeling like an Outsider can eventually give you the freedom and license to create your own world, follow your own goals, and make your own reality.  I’ve always thought it must be a lot harder for those who effortlessly belong – how much stronger the temptation to just blend in and be a non-questioning sheep!  Yes, there is pain. Feelings of rejection, confusion, self-doubt.  But think of those negatives in a positive light:  you have the chance to acquire resilience, fortitude, understanding and the realization but you have one life to live, so you absolutely have the right to live it your way!
It’s no shame to get help and inspiration from others, which is why David Watters ‘Never Blend In’, is so timely.
TRISHA GODDARD

some people growing up LGBT will certainly want affirmation that they are not alone, but they will also (quite rightly IMHO) resist the idea that there is a “type” and that they fall into a categorisation. Such is the human paradox, yearning to assimilated and demanding to be treated as unique and apart. A part of the tribe and apart from the tribe. There are plenty of young LGBT people I know or have known who hate the idea of any sort of ghetto or connection with others. I’m Jewish and I’ll fight against anti-Semitism, but I’ll also raise issues about Israel’s violations of human rights and express my happy atheism and contempt for much of Judaism… It’s not a question of “hurrah, there’s a role model, now I know who I am and who my people are and where I belong in the world.”

Links to MORE of my writing:
AMBIENTE.US, NEVER BLEND IN ARTICLES:
POLARI ARTICLES:
MANCHESTER MOUTH (INTERVIEW APRIL 2010):
aechi opens-up on gay issues
10thousand Couples LLC (ARTICLE MAY 2010):

 

 


More Glitter ‐ Less Bitter


   More Glitter Less Bitter  Photographs by Daniel Nicoletta 

1975 – present 

 WHEN:

June 4 – July 10, 2010 

 Artist reception: Friday, June 4, 6 – 8 PM 

WHERE:

Electric Works

130 8th Street

San Francisco, California 94103

415 626 5496 phone

415 626 2396 fax

http://www.sfelectricworks.com

   

 
  Electric Works is pleased to present More Glitter – Less Bitter, a poignant romp through Dan Nicolettaʼs vigilant documentation of San Franciscoʼs gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender communities. 

Dan Nicoletta at Castro Camera, by Denton Smith, Fall 1976

In 1975 Dan Nicoletta was hired by Harvey Milk to work in Milkʼs Castro Street camera store and there at age 19, Danʼs life path as a documentarian for that emerging scene began. Milk was one of the first openly gay elected officials in the world and he became a symbol of hope to the LGBT civil rights movement after he was assassinated in 1978. 

The photographs in the exhibit will highlight significant moments along the way including still photos taken by Nicoletta on the set of Gus Van Santʼs Academy Award winning film MILK in which actor Lucas Grabeel portrayed Nicoletta. 

Lucas Grabeel (as Dan Nicoletta), February 11, 2008, photo by Dan Nicoletta

Through the last 38 years Nicoletta has remained a key point person for LGBT Community related research. The title of this exhibit More Glitter – Less Bitter, takes its cue from Nicolettaʼs penchant for the ebullient and theatrical in life. 

In his article about Nicoletta’s 1996 retrospective in San Francisco, art critic David Bonetti wrote: 

“…it has been Nicoletta’s conscious choice to photograph the more, shall we say, theatrical members of a community that has been famous for putting the pizzazz in theater since the first fabulous costume was worn on that stage just East of Eden. (Who, after all, invented sequins?) … if you love flamboyance, drag queens, discos, alternative theater, pretty boys, powerful women and the in-your-face politics of Queer Nation, you’ll probably find Nicoletta’s photographs just your cup of tea… San Francisco is lucky that Nicoletta has been there with his camera recording it through all of its changes.” 

Interviews with Dan Nicoletta can also be scheduled directly with Dan @ 415.665-5930, cell 415.310-3072 or info@dannynicoletta.com or through Judith Selby 415-626-5496 judith@sfelectricworks.com 

 

Gallery Hours: 

 Tuesday – Friday 11- 6 

Saturday 11-5 

Electric Works 

130 8th Street 

San Francisco, California 94103 

415 626 5496 phone 

415 626 2396 fax 

http://www.sfelectricworks.com 

 More Glitter – Less Bitter is an official San Francisco Pride Event.http://www.sfpride.org

For downloadable press images for Daniel Nicoletta 

http://dannynicoletta.com/press.shtml 

additional press photos about Electric Works Gallery here: 

http://www.flickr.com/photos/electricworks 

 http://www.dannynicoletta.com 

  
 

Dan Nicoletta, 2001, photo by Matthew Madrigal

Dan Nicoletta is a San Francisco based photographer who began his career in 1975 as an assistant to the late Crawford Barton who was then a staff photographer for the Advocate. During that time Dan also worked in Harvey Milk’s camera store in the heart of the burgeoning lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, mecca in San Francisco’s Castro district. He was involved in several of Milk’s political campaigns including Milk’s victorious election to public office as one of the first openly gay elected officials in the world. Nicoletta has continued to document the reverberations of Milk’s legacy for over thirty four years serving as a key point person for LGBT civil rights and Milk related research. 

Dan’s work has been featured in numerous settings, including the Academy Award – winning film Milk by Gus Van Sant, the Academy Award-winning documentary The Times Of Harvey Milk by Rob Epstein and Richard Schmiechen, and the award-winning documentary Sex Is by Marc Huestis and Lawrence Helman. (Berlin Film Festival – Best Gay Documentary 1993). 

His work has also appeared in numerous periodicals and books including: Randy Shilt’s Mayor Of Castro Street, Susan Stryker and Jim Van Buskirk’s Gay By The Bay and Harold Evans’ The American Century and also the ten year anniversary catalog Out At The Library – Celebrating The James C. Hormel Gay and Lesbian Center and the book Flight of Angels, by Adrian Brooks, about The seminal theatre group The Angels of Light, and MILK A Pictorial History of Harvey Milk which includes a section of unit photography from MILK the film. 

Dan’s work has been in numerous group shows and he has had featured exhibitions at Overtones Gallery (Los Angeles), and Mace Gallery, Electric Works Gallery and the lobby of Levi Strauss & Company, (San Francisco). 

His work has been collected by the Wallach Collection of Fine Prints and the Berg 

Collection at the New York Public Library, the James C. Hormel Gay and Lesbian Center at the San Francisco Public Library and the Schwules Museum in Berlin and by many private collectors. 

He is a graduate of San Francisco State’s Bachelor of Arts program and was born NYC in 1954 and raised in Utica, New York. 

  PUBLICATIONS – BOOKS Camerawork – An Autobiography of the SF Bay Area – Part 1,edited by Chuck Mobley (2010) 

  

MILK A Pictoral History of Harvey Milk – Texts by Armistead Maupin & Dustin Lance Black (2009) 

  

Flights of Angels, my life with the Angels of Light – by Adrian Brooks (2008) 

Out at the Library – Celebrating the James C. Hormel Gay and Lesbian Center (2005) 

The Fabulous Sylvester - by Joshua Gamson (2005) 

Midnight At The Palace – My life as a fabulous Cockette – by Pam Tent (2004) 

Tracking Choreography in the Age of AIDS - by David Gere (2004) 

The Beat Generation – A Gale Critical Companion (2003) 

Forging Gay Identities - by Elizabeth Armstrong (2002) 

American Century - by Harold Evans (1999) 

Long Road to Freedom – History of the Gay & Lesbian Movement 

by Mark Thompson (1994) 

Uncommon Heroes - edited by Phillip Sherman (1994) 

REsearch – Modern Primitives - edited by V. Vale and Andrea Juno (1989) 

San Francisco Observed - edited by Ruth Silverman (1986) 

The Mayor of Castro Street – The Life and Times of Harvey Milk by Randy Shilts (1981) 

And also work published in books by ruth weiss, Strange de Jim, Bruce la Bruce, etc. 

PUBLICATIONS – MAGAZINES AND NEWSPAPERS 

  

N. Y. Times, New York Daily News, Village Voice, L. A. Times , S. F. Chronicle, S. F. Examiner, S. F. Bay Guardian, Bay Area Reporter, S. F. Bay Times, The Advocate, Instinct, Out, Windy City Times, X-tra West (Canada), Drama Logue, Theatre Communications, Dragazine, Müncher Merker, Germany, The Guardian, UK, Akademikern, Sweden 

 

RELATED LINKS:

http://flavorpill.com/sanfrancisco/events/2010/6/4/more-glitter-andmdash-less-bitter-photos-by-daniel-nicoletta

http://sf.funcheap.com/artist-reception-glitter-bitter-soma/

https://www.kintera.org/AutoGen/Register/Register.asp?ievent=420856&en=kmJRJ9MVIbJXIdMRIiI4JrO5IkKYLcMYIqK2IfO1ItKfG

http://www.sfelectricworks.com/newsletter/

http://www.flickr.com/photos/electricworks/


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