San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park was home to a huge display of the AIDS Memorial Quilt this weekend in honour of its 35th anniversary.
It marked the largest exhibit of the quilt in roughly a decade and is the biggest display to ever take place in the city. There were 3,000 panels of the quilt on show for the public in the Robin Williams Meadow, with one block of the quilt each being made up of eight panels.
The full quilt weighs a total of 54 tonnes and 110,000 names are stitched into its 50,000 individually sewn panels. During a visit with Drag Race UK stars Vanity Milan and Kitty Scott-Claus, as well as Virgin Atlantic and San Francisco Travel Association’s next ionic drag star Glitzy Von Jagger, GAY TIMES spoke to John Cunningham, the CEO of National AIDS Memorial. “You know, the power of what we’re doing here today is a continuation of what started 35 years ago,” he explained, reflecting on how public attitudes have changed since the height of the epidemic. “I think it’s important that we all remember, that in the early days of the AIDS crisis, especially in America, it was all about, ‘It was them, it was the gays, it was drug users, it was substances’ and so it was easy to make an ‘other’.” Cunningham added that there was a government “that chose not to respond” to the AIDS epidemic, which resulted in activist Cleve Jones stitching a panel of fabric for his best friend in 1987.
Conor Clark for GAY TIMES The quilt now exists as a way of educating people about the past, as well as a way of remembering those lost to HIV/AIDS.