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2024.4.2
Gender Non Conforming, 2024
2024
Digital billboards and posters
2 of 17 from
All Varieties

288 x 576px, 352 x 540px, 360 x 576px, 432 x 288px, 448 x 576px, 504 x 756px, 576 x 880px, 600 x 280px, 600 x 300px, 612 x 306px, 720 x 384px, 720 x 1080px, 864 x 432px, 864 x 1296px, 880 x 576px, 900 x 450px, 1040 x 440px, 1080 x 1920px, 1152 x 432px, 1224 x 324px, 1280 x 360px, 1728 x 432px, 1920 x 1080px, 2160 x 3840px, 2304 x 576px, 3024 x 3024px Jpeg, RGB Colour
June & July 2024
UK-wide
Gender creates expectations in society about how a person of a given gender will appear and behave. Anyone who appears or behaves differently could be described as ‘gender non-conforming’.

'Gender non-conforming' often describes a pioneer who intentionally subverts gender norms. Being gender non-conforming doesn’t necessarily mean someone is transgender or nonbinary, although they could be both.
Lanah Pillay, gender pioneer, at Firrell's
Gender Think-In,
2017. Photographed by Yves Salmon, 29 June 2017.
2017.1.8b
Gender non-conformity is nothing new. In the mid 18th Century, Giuseppe Bonito (1707 - 1789) painted
Il Femminiello
a portrait of one of Naples' femminielli (literally, ‘little female-men’).

Femminielli were embraced as a ‘third sex’. In particular, they were thought to bring good luck so Neapolitans would often take them out gambling and even bring their babies to be blessed by them.

All Varieties
celebrates the labels that help people express their individuality and define their place in the world.