Sweet Life and Sweet Treats | Merged Diptychs | The Gay Domestic | The Subdivision | Digital Photocollage | 2026
There’s always a sweet side to life — if you can get to the center of the Tootsie Pop.
A diptych is two panels connected thematically, not physically — two images that sit side by side, related but separate, each still its own frame. A merged diptych takes that space away. It brings the two together and makes them one instead of two — the seam disappears, or stops mattering. The two collages in this post take the architectural structure of merged diptychs in their own unique candy coated fashion.
The subject of these two works, Sweet Life and Sweet Treats, is the true story of Roman Emperor Hadrian and his lover Antinous, considered the most well-documented gay romance in Western history. Hadrian never recovered from losing Antinous. All of his efforts after — the city, the cult, the coins, all to his memory — trace back to the tragedy of a man losing his other half and staying broken by it for the remainder of his life. Two people had become one, and when the seam reopened, it didn’t heal.
These merged diptychs forever reconnect these two lovers and put them inside a confectioner’s window — brownies stacked like masonry, heart-shaped lollipops keeping watch, marshmallows crowding a hot-pink cup, Jupiter 3 hovering at a statue’s hip like it’s always been there. History treats men like Hadrian and Antinous coldly — dates, titles, a paragraph reducing grief to political theater. But they were human, not historical. They ate, they touched, they got lost in each other the way any couple does. The marble is a reality. The softness around it is the correction — flesh where the history books left only stone.
The sweet life, and sweet treats, if the phrases mean anything, mean wanting someone in the open, the way Hadrian wanted Antinous, without translating it into something smaller first. Most of the world still can’t. As of 2026, roughly 63 to 66 countries criminalize homosexuality outright, and in about a dozen of them the penalty on the books is death. Even in the United States, where the law mostly stopped policing the bedroom decades ago, national surveys still find somewhere between 39 and 46 percent of LGBTQ+ workers closeted on the job — not out of shame, necessarily, but out of a cost-benefit calculation made fresh every morning. That’s the same tension the candy is built on: human, not historical, plays both ways here too — the tenderness is real, and so is the risk.
Here, for one merged diptych at a time, the risk gets suspended. The sweetness holds. The two stay merged.
— Behan
Sources: ILGA World Database on criminalisation of consensual same-sex acts (2026); Human Dignity Trust, Map of Jurisdictions that Criminalise LGBT People; Human Rights Campaign, “Equality Rising: LGBTQ+ Workers and the Road Ahead” (2026); Stonewall UK workplace research (2025).