Bryn Kelly (1980–2016) was an American writer, artist, performer, and community organizer.[1] [2] [3] Kelly has shown work at New Museum and performed in conjunction with Visual AIDS and in Art in the Age of Aquarius at the Whitney Museum of American Art.[4] She was a member of the Femme Collective, participated in Baltimore's 2012 Femme Conference, and was a cofounder of Theater Transgression, a transgender multimedia performance collective.[5] Her writing and writing performances have appeared in Original Plumbing, Manic D Press, the National Queer Arts Festival, PrettyQueer.com, and EOAGH, A Journal of the Arts, amongst others.[6]
Kelly was born in Ohio. She had deep affiliations with Appalachia and eventually she would go on to organize the online community and archiving project, Queer Appalachia. After a short stint in Michigan, Kelly moved to New York to pursue writing. She studied playwriting at Brooklyn College.[7]
Kelly wrote the short story, "Other Balms, Other Gileads," which was published in the Time Is Not a Line: Reflections on HIV/AIDS issue of the We Who Feel Differently journal, edited by Theodore Kerr. The text is cited as a seminal piece of transgender literature from the 21st century, alongside Nevada: A Novel by Imogen Binnie and short stories by Torrey Peters.[8]
In 2013, Kelly was a Lambda Literary Fellow in Nonfiction .[9]
Kelly cofounded the Theater Transgression, a transgender multimedia performance collective. She served as co-creator and cast member of the touring roadshow, The Fully Functional Cabaret. She also performed in Lisa Anne Auerbach's public program, Art in the Age of Aquarius, at the Whitney Museum of American Art.
In 2015, she was named one of TheBody.com's 100 trans HIV/AIDS leaders.[10]
Kelly worked as a hairstylist. She began styling hair for movies, theater, and runway and print advertisements, specialized in pin-up styles of the '40s, '50s and '60s.[11]
Activist and historian Sarah Schulman, writer Morgan M. Page, author and comedian Kelli Dunham, Elizabeth Koke of Housing Works, and medical researcher and surgeon Gaines Blasdel were close friends and lovers.[12]