Art Exhibit Explores Code-Switching Through a Queer Modern Lens
Posted by Desiree Guerrero on Sep 20, 2023
While he’s been a successful working artist — and podiatric surgeon — for decades now, Don Hershman’s artwork in recent years feels more invigorated and inspired than ever. His last sold-out show in New York, “Donald and Victor: Under The Influence,” was a thought-provoking and loving tribute to his former partner who passed away due to HIV-related complications in 2001.
Now, Hershman is back in NYC to unveil his newest collection of 21 paintings entitled “The Art of Code Switching.” The exhibition, which opens tomorrow at Salomon Arts Gallery in Manhattan’s Tribeca district, explores both our conscious and subconscious need to code-switch simply to help us navigate a world that forces white-patriarchal “norms” upon us.
“When I began my formal residency training in the early ’80s I had to relocate to the South, forcing me back into the closet,” Hershman explains. “Creating these new paintings took me on a journey back to a time where there was no political correctness or recourse; easily fired or shunned if it were revealed that I was gay. After residency, I relocated to San Francisco and worked as a podiatric surgeon in an atmosphere engulfed by the AIDS epidemic, where young men often were not only hiding their sexual orientation, but their HIV status as well. They were constantly code-switching without even knowing it.”
Merriam-Webster defines code-switching as “the switching from the linguistic system of one language or dialect to that of another.” But Hershman’s work pushes beyond that concept — examining how women, people of color, and queer and trans people often have to change much more than the way they speak in order to avoid discrimination, persecution, and violence on a daily basis. And it couldn’t be more timely, considering the relentless cultural and legislative war the far-right has waged against LGBTQ+ people over the last few years.
Still, the artist insists there is a beauty to code-switching, which is why Hershman wanted to create imagery that also felt joyous for this collection. Indeed, the vivid colors and brushstrokes of the paintings seem to leap off the canvas and into one’s heart and mind in a truly visceral way. “The flip side of code-switching is going back to your home…going back to our families, going back to our friends, and being able to be and speak and act as who we really are.”
“The Art of Code Switching” runs from September 21 through October 15 at the Salomon Arts Gallery in Manhattan. Ten percent of the proceeds from all art sales will be donated to The Trevor Project, a nonprofit focused on suicide prevention among LGBTQ+ youth.