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Bureau Queer Art | Queer & Allied Contemporary Artists
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Bureau Queer Art | Queer & Allied Contemporary Artists
Bureau Queer Art | Queer & Allied Contemporary Artists
Home
What is Collectivo
Artists Directory
InResidency Online
Low Residenct - CDMX
APPLY
ArtWorkArchive
Exhibitions History
Digital Magazine
Purchase Print Edition
PODcast
Magazine Downloads
Home
Folder: PARTICIPATE
Back
What is Collectivo
Artists Directory
InResidency Online
Low Residenct - CDMX
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Folder: Exhibitions
Back
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Back
Digital Magazine
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A mural depicting a mostly nude figure with draped cloths, large leaves, a bird, and a snake. View fullsize
Woman standing in a colorful, fabric-covered booth at an art exhibition View fullsize
Two men face each other, one with a tattooed hand, both looking at or touching the hand outdoors. View fullsize
Blurry photo of a person with a hat in an indoor space, with bright green, red, and orange lighting. View fullsize
A woman with black hair, bold makeup, and winged eyeliner, holding her chin, in front of a colorful background with red roses and green leaves. View fullsize
Colorful artwork featuring children playing among skeletons and skulls, with vibrant background and playful elements. View fullsize
Person wearing a blue furry monster mask and a striped red and green dress standing outside in a grassy area with trees in the background. View fullsize
Person wearing an artistic mask with cutouts for eyes and mouth, showing blue eyes and painted black-and-white nails, surrounded by pink flowers. View fullsize
Abstract painting of nude figures in a swimming pool, reflecting light on water surface. View fullsize
Event poster for Soledad music event, September 5 to November 1, featuring DABART.ME and PGMX, with the tagline 'The risk of intimacy is shared'. View fullsize
A mural depicting a mostly nude figure with draped cloths, large leaves, a bird, and a snake.
Woman standing in a colorful, fabric-covered booth at an art exhibition
Two men face each other, one with a tattooed hand, both looking at or touching the hand outdoors.
Blurry photo of a person with a hat in an indoor space, with bright green, red, and orange lighting.
A woman with black hair, bold makeup, and winged eyeliner, holding her chin, in front of a colorful background with red roses and green leaves.
Colorful artwork featuring children playing among skeletons and skulls, with vibrant background and playful elements.
Person wearing a blue furry monster mask and a striped red and green dress standing outside in a grassy area with trees in the background.
Person wearing an artistic mask with cutouts for eyes and mouth, showing blue eyes and painted black-and-white nails, surrounded by pink flowers.
Abstract painting of nude figures in a swimming pool, reflecting light on water surface.
Event poster for Soledad music event, September 5 to November 1, featuring DABART.ME and PGMX, with the tagline 'The risk of intimacy is shared'.

© 2025/2026 The Bureau of Queer Art

Authorship, Process & Rights

At TBQA, artists are not treated as subjects of documentation, but as collaborators in the creation of meaning. Written features begin with artist responses, interviews, and materials provided directly by the artist. These are then shaped through an editorial process that may include restructuring, condensation, and the development of a cohesive narrative voice. This process may involve the use of writing tools to assist in clarity, flow, and translation across languages, but the ideas, experiences, and core language remain grounded in the artist’s original contribution. The goal is not to replace the artist’s voice, but to hold it—to extend it into a form that can circulate, be read, and be remembered. We don’t transcribe artists. We write with them. Their words are the ground. The text is the meeting.

Artists retain full copyright of all images and artwork submitted to TBQA. By participating, artists grant TBQA a non-exclusive, permission-based license to use submitted materials for the purposes of publication, promotion, and archiving across TBQA platforms. This includes the magazine (print and digital), Substack, website, social media, and related press or editorial features. All works are credited to the artist whenever presented. TBQA does not claim ownership over artist work, nor does it sell or license images to third parties without explicit consent. Images and materials are used in the context of fair use for documentation, critique, and cultural discourse, in alignment with the mission of supporting and circulating Queer artistic practices.