Approximate Symmetry | The Closet | The Subdivision | Digital Photocollage | 2026.
Approximate symmetry is neither nor, both and, all in the same space and time. It is the moment between symmetry and asymmetry, a composition that almost resolves and then declines at the same instance. A form that lives in the gap between two states is a form under pressure, and that pressure, held long enough, becomes its own kind of diamond.
In my newest collage “Approximate Symmetry,” the title is both compositional and spatial at once. A backdrop from Heated Rivalry, whose leads play gay with total commitment on screen and total silence off it. In front, a content-creator pairing who wink at being a couple without ever confirming it, keeping it at the level of are they or aren’t they, a question that probably does more tfor engagement than an answer ever could. Crossing the whole frame, the male odalisque: the body offered as content, desire without an owner. Three ways of visiting queer space without living in it.
That’s where queer people sit today. Inside the culture and outside it. Consumed and disowned in the same gesture. Approximate symmetry as a description of a people’s position — always almost included, never quite settled — while straight culture keeps deciding, room by room, how much queerness it will allow in their world.
Social media is the gatekeeper, and the numbers say the door is closing. GLAAD’s 2026 Social Media Safety Index gives every major platform a failing grade. 2026 scores drop across the board, with X landing lowest at 29 out of 100, YouTube at 30 after an 11-point collapse, Instagram at 41, Facebook at 40, and Threads at 39. A 2025 survey of over 7,000 Meta users across 86 countries found LGBTQ people reporting more vulnerability since Meta’s early-2025 policy rollbacks. The report names the mechanism directly: platforms disproportionately suppress LGBTQ content through removal, demonetization, age-gating, and shadowbanning.
Like many gay content creators in the past year under this new administration, I’ve been banned outright from Instagram, Threads, and X. Facebook and TikTok are what’s left. Yesterday I was reported for one of my long past images and restricted for a day. Facebook could go next.
There’s no notice when that happens. An account is just gone, with no way to find out why, where, or whether it’s coming back. That’s how it goes on social media. So if I’m suddenly gone from Facebook, you’ll most likely know why.
Historically, gay people have been good at not going where they’re not wanted, physically and rhetorically, which in Western culture has been pretty much everywhere. Now that gay culture, gay lifestyles, and gay people are beginning to enter that public sphere in a visible, vocal way, the dom culture has a decision to make. And that decision is whether they’re going to keep treating gay people as a problem for them to solve.
Happy 4th.