4 minute read

Then & Now: Trailblazing Journey

Harrison Guy continues to break barriers at City Hall and in the arts.

By SAM BYRD

SHARBER

When Harrison Guy appeared on the 2019 O utSmart cover, he had been recently elected as the first Black male grand marshal in the more than four decades of Houston Pride celebrations.

“The fact that you get nominated is really an honor, and then when I did the research and confirmed there weren’t any Black men [who had earned the title] before me, that made it even more special,” he says.

During his research, he found out that Larry Bagneris, a Black Houston activist, had actually organized the city’s first Pride parade in 1979.

“I was super-excited to research Larry and find him,” Guy mentions. “It all came full circle for me when I was able to find him in New Orleans and bring him to Houston to talk about his story. And I’m continuing that relationship.”

Never one to slow down, Guy has been busy lately as an artist, activist, and community leader. He was appointed to Mayor Turner’s LGBTQ Advisory Board in 2016, and when he took over as chair of the committee in 2019, he ushered in the structural changes he knew were needed to further the group’s impact.

“When I was invited to the mayor’s board, I learned very quickly that Houston had crowned and ordained a very small group of people that [became the face of] the LGBTQ community. It was the same leaders being recycled through different organizations for decades,” he recalls. “By the time I became chair, I made it my mission to change the room, so I on-boarded a lot of people, brought a lot of new voices in, and then I made sure that the upcoming chairs would be people who were young and had things to say who had not been listened to before.”

Guy’s involvement in the community has only grown over the years. Since O utSmart last spoke with him, he has moved from working in higher education to a full-time job with the 5th Ward Cultural Arts District. Most recently, he helped pull together the tenth annual Alliance at the Renaissance Festival, with more exciting events on the horizon.

“I get the awesome pleasure of working out of the historic DeLuxe Theater on Lyons Avenue. And I get to manage the theater as well as facilitate the culturalarts plans that the community came up with,” he notes. “We have a large public art installation that went up recently. We just opened a portable housing complex for artists right behind the DeLuxe. There are more than a dozen affordable housing units for artists, and we just got our first artistin-residence for that.”

Through the 5th Ward Cultural Arts District, Guy also helped launch a musicaltheater program for young people in the community, as well as a program that provides children with violin lessons.

“Work keeps me very busy with all things arts-and-culture here,” he adds.

His involvement in the arts, which has also included choreography work, extends well beyond the Fifth Ward. In 2021, his original modern-dance work Colored Carnegie was featured in a Performing Arts Houston New/Now program at Jones Hall. And for the second year now, Guy is assembling the work of local queer Black artists and allies this month for a show entitled The Art of Black Pride: Black LGBTQ Art Exhibition, running May 3–13 at The Mag, 1201 Main St. Suite 101. The show coincides with Houston’s Black LGBTQ Pride Week, and in addition to the local artists being featured, a portion of the national AIDS Memorial Quilt will be on display.

As he looks toward a future filled with possibilities, Guy muses about how his previous work will likely influence his future path. “I am still figuring the future out. I have some big goals I would like to accomplish, but I think what I want to do now is cultivate an organization that fills in the gaps that I’ve encountered from all the work I’ve been doing. There’s a lot of community-building that needs to happen, and that takes a lot of time.” young and had things to say who had not been listened to before.”

Read more about Guy’s connection with Larry Bagneris, the Black founder of Houston’s Pride parade, at tinyurl. com/GuyHarrison.

Guy’s involvement in the community has only grown over the years. Since O utSmart last spoke with him, he has moved from working in higher education to a full-time job with the 5th Ward Cultural Arts District. Most recently, he helped pull together the tenth annual Alliance at the Renaissance Festival, with more exciting events on the horizon.

“I get the awesome pleasure of working out of the historic DeLuxe Theater on Lyons Avenue. And I get to manage the theater as well as facilitate the culturalarts plans that the community came up with,” he notes. “We have a large public art installation that went up recently. We just opened a portable housing complex for artists right behind the DeLuxe. There are more than a dozen affordable housing units for artists, and we just got our first artistin-residence for that.”

Through the 5th Ward Cultural Arts District, Guy also helped launch a musicaltheater program for young people in the community, as well as a program that provides children with violin lessons.

“Work keeps me very busy with all things arts-and-culture here,” he adds.

His involvement in the arts, which has also included choreography work, extends well beyond the Fifth Ward. In 2021, his original modern-dance work Colored Carnegie was featured in a Performing Arts Houston New/Now program at Jones Hall. And for the second year now, Guy is assembling the work of local queer Black artists and allies this month for a show entitled The Art of Black Pride: Black LGBTQ Art Exhibition, running May 3–13 at The Mag, 1201 Main St. Suite 101. The show coincides with Houston’s Black LGBTQ Pride Week, and in addition to the local artists being featured, a portion of the national AIDS Memorial Quilt will be on display.

As he looks toward a future filled with possibilities, Guy muses about how his previous work will likely influence his future path. “I am still figuring the future out. I have some big goals I would like to accomplish, but I think what I want to do now is cultivate an organization that fills in the gaps that I’ve encountered from all the work I’ve been doing. There’s a lot of community-building that needs to happen, and that takes a lot of time.”

Read more about Guy’s connection with Larry Bagneris, the Black founder of Houston’s Pride parade, at tinyurl. com/GuyHarrison.

This article is from: