In this manifesto, Mel Oliver invites us to join her curated queer digital archive, The Black Orbit, where the documentation ...
Roxy Bourdillon is living the lesbian dream: that is, she gets paid to be a professional lesbian. Merryn Johns meets her British editorial counterpart, and chats about the DIVA editor’s memoir, What A ...
We are pleased to present the Curve Power List for 2025. Raquel Willis (she/her) is an award-winning author, activist, and media strategist dedicated to collective liberation, especially for Black ...
We asked, and you nominated. Here are the top 50 outstanding individuals who made our inaugural Power List for their incredible work in the public eye, behind the scenes, in our community, or the ...
Real-life besties Leisha Hailey and Kate Moennig sit down with Janelle Beck to discuss their joint memoir So Gay for You, which is a New York Times bestseller—and the phenomenon that was the ...
The Canadian folk singer dishes on not being defined by lesbianism and playing house with Bitch. Since she hit the women’s music scene in 1980, Ferron has been sharing her soulful, poetic songs with ...
The Curve Foundation and the NLGJA: The Association of LGBTQ+ Journalists are delighted to introduce the recipients of the Curve Fellowship for Emerging Journalists. The endowment, sponsored by The ...
In 2020, the same year Curve ceased publishing, Sara Prager at Tagg Magazine wrote a right-on article about the problem of appropriating one of the iconic identities of Black lesbians: the stud. First ...
2025 marks the third year of The Curve Foundation’s re-invigorated annual community Photo Contest! Curve magazine held an annual lesbian lifestyle photography contest for eleven years, and we are so ...
Fifteen spooky must-see gems for fans of the sinister side of cinema. While dramas and psychological thrillers like The Kids Are All Right and Black Swan garner all the headlines (and awards) for ...
Curve editor Merryn Johns reflects on a female photographer whose work possibly altered the course of her life, and discovers that they share a female gaze across hemispheres—and a love for Vegemite.
Lois Elfman meets out American-Canadian ice dancer Kaitlyn Weaver. How does a woman in a sport that celebrates conventional femininity adapt when she comes out? This being ice skating, that is indeed ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results