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Radical Love

A multimedia installation that centres Black and Afro-Indigenous Trans women and non-binary people, creating monuments to Trans lives and their survival.


“Rooted in Black radical thought, this project draws on the 1977 Combahee River Collective articulation that if we make the world safer for those most marginalized — for me, this means specifically Black Trans women (who are Deaf, Mad and disabled) — we are necessarily making the world safer for everyone. 

It is so rare for Black and Afro-Indigenous Trans folks to see themselves reflected in public space, expected and imagined in city planning, despite the incredible contributions that Black Trans and non-binary people have given to the city. My project interrupts this history of erasure and instead centres these experiences at its core, celebrating Trans lives and embodied presence in our city.

Abstracted geometric monuments glow in low light, radiating vibrant images that embody the notion that #transisbeautiful and #transispowerful, proclaiming radical love for all our ways of being. 

Thank you to Ravyn, Monica, and Chrys for sharing their brilliance and power with me and the world. Their activism makes this city safer for Black Trans people. These monuments are also a way of honouring and celebrating these lives, this labour.”

– Syrus Marcus Ware

Photo (right): Ravyn Wngz

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Syrus Marcus Ware

Syrus Marcus Ware is an Assistant Professor at the School of the Arts, McMaster University. He is a Vanier scholar, visual artist, activist, curator and educator. Syrus uses painting, installation and performance to explore social justice frameworks and black activist culture, and he’s shown widely in galleries and festivals across Canada. He is a core-team member of Black Lives Matter – Toronto, co-founder of Black Lives Matter - Canada, a part of the Performance Disability Art Collective, and an ABD PhD candidate at York University in the Faculty of Environmental Studies. His ongoing curatorial work includes That’s So Gay (Gladstone Hotel, 2016-2019) and BlacknessYes!/Blockorama. He is the co-editor of the best-selling Until We Are Free: Reflections on Black Lives Matter in Canada (URP, 2020).