Beginning in 1978, Regnault photographed the annual Pride Marches in New York City for over two decades. These marches grew out of the Stonewall uprising of 1969, when members of the LGBTQIA+ community resisted ongoing police harassment, marking a turning point in the fight for queer rights around the world.
Among the earliest Pride marches of their kind, these gatherings would go on to shape what became a global movement. Pride marches functioned as both protest and gathering, spaces where visibility, solidarity, and political demand took shape. Moving between Fifth Avenue, the West Village, and the West Side Piers (New York), the work traces the Pride movement as it unfolded across the city, bringing together moments of joy, intimacy, and resistance. The series includes figures central to this history, such as Marsha P. Johnson.
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