Southern Fried Queer Pride brings third annual ‘homegrown’ LGBT festival to Atlanta

The third annual Southern Fried Queer Pride takes over Atlanta next week, celebrating an intentional space for the queer and trans members of the area’s LGBT community.

“We saw there was a lack of space for queer and trans people of color, especially black people, to have our own experiences, to feel valid,” said Taylor Alxndr, SFQP co-founder and executive director. “There wasn’t really a space of art to be the centerpiece, especially art of social activism and social justice. We saw a lot of events in Atlanta that were LGBT-focused going in a very commercial and corporate direction. We wanted to keep it local.”

The festival is entirely community-funded, and does not accept sponsorships from large companies.

“We don’t accept money from major corporations that may want to tamper with our mission and our goals. A lot of corporations want to give you a certain amount of money, but they want to have a certain amount of space in your program or maybe water down your political message. We definitely don’t want to do that,” Alxndr said. “We’re just more homegrown.”

This year’s line-up includes “Queer Threads: A Pop-Up Thrift Shop!” at Eyedrum Gallery, a Latinx queer and trans social, nutrition workshop potlucks, art expos, “Look Who’s F*cking Now! A Black Porn Critique” discussion and panel, dance parties and more.

Developing programming for SFQP is purposely an organic process. Members of the community come to the organization with the workshops or skill-share events they want to host or include. That’s perfect given SFQP’s community-centric feel.

“This is the first year of really expanding it. We started off as a three-day festival, Friday to Sunday. This year we expanded to a five-day,” Alxndr said. “Our attendance has doubled. More people want more different types of programming.”

Alxndr said Atlanta is looked to as the “queer mecca” of the South, so visitors to SFQP aren’t always from Georgia. The celebration inspired other cities to start their own satellite versions, the first of which is likely to take place in North Carolina.

“People are really drawn to things that they can connect with; more grassroots things, more community-based things have that closer connection,” Alxndr said. “In the current political climate we’re in, I think building resilience and building these strong bonds as a community are more important than ever. … We don’t know where our government may take us, but it’s important to bond together and realize we have lots of fights to fight. We feel the community definitely senses that.”

Third annual Southern Fried Queer Pride
Tuesday, May 23 through Saturday, May 27
Various events and locations
For the full line-up, visit www.southernfriedqueerpride.com/sfqp2017