Gallery — Gay

Julian walked between the canvases, his shadow stretching across the floor. He stopped at the portrait of the drag queen. "The world thinks a 'gay gallery' is just about who we love," Julian said, his voice echoing in the high-ceilinged room. "But it's actually about how we see. It’s about the joy we find when we’re forced to build our own sunshine."

"You're late," Julian said without turning around as the front bell chimed. gay gallery

Julian, the curator, moved through the space with the quiet grace of a man who lived among ghosts and masterpieces. He was currently hanging a series of charcoal sketches by an artist from the 1920s—works that had been hidden in a dusty attic for decades because the subjects, two men holding hands by a lake, were considered too "dangerous" for the public eye. Julian walked between the canvases, his shadow stretching

The neon sign hummed a soft, electric violet above the entrance of The Lavender Frame . To the rest of the city, it was just another boutique on a quiet side street, but to those who knew, it was the "Gay Gallery." Behind its unassuming oak doors lived a sanctuary of colors that the world outside often tried to mute. "But it's actually about how we see