Day With(out) Art 2025: Meet Us Where We’re At… OTA In Person Screening Logo
  • Day With(out) Art 2025: Meet Us Where We’re At…

  • Monday December 1st, 2025

    6PM-8PM EST

    New Haven Pride Center

    50 Orange Street New Haven, CT 06510

    Open to all

  • Decolonial Sex Worker Empowerment Project and the New Haven Pride Center is proud to partner with Visual AIDS for Day With(out) Art 2025 by presenting Meet Us Where We’re At, a program of six videos that forefront the experiences of drug users and harm reduction practices as they intersect with the ongoing HIV crisis.

    Meet Us Where We’re At… will feature newly commissioned videos by Kenneth Idongesit Usoro (Nigeria), Hoàng Thái Anh (Vietnam), Gustavo Vinagre & Vinicius Couto (Brazil/Portugal), Camilo Tapia Flores (Chile/Brazil), Camila Flores-Fernández (Peru/Germany), and José Luis Cortés (Puerto Rico).


    Commissioned videos by artists in Puerto Rico, Brazil, Nigeria, Germany, and Vietnam journey across a range of spaces revealing the complexity of drug use. Several videos document the visible world of drugs—a harm reduction program in a Berlin park, a night out during Rio’s Carnival—while others reveal private, often hidden spaces where safety is found: bedrooms, underground clinics, and moments of connection between lovers.


    Meet Us Where We’re At speaks not only to the variety of physical locations where contemporary harm reduction is practiced, but also to a broader shift: centering drug users as authors of their own experiences. Rooted in the philosophy of meeting people at their personal reality without judgment, the program affirms the full context of drug use—its pleasures, its risks, and its role in how people survive, care, and connect.


    Harm reduction has long been central to the AIDS movement through practices like needle exchange and safe injection sites, and people who use drugs have been affected by HIV since the earliest days of the epidemic. This program brings their perspectives to the forefront, amplifying the voices of drug users as storytellers, cultural producers, and essential participants in the global response to HIV.

    This open to all screening will take place on Monday December 1st, 2025 at the New Haven Pride Center from 6PM-8PM EST at 50 Orange Street New Haven, CT. Join us afterwards for a facilitated discussion about the films, and to learn more about the work of fellow CT based projects and organizations working at intersections of harm reduction, racial justice, gender justice, disability justice and more. Register using the form below to RSVP!

    Visual AIDS is a New York-based non-profit that utilizes art to fight AIDS by provoking dialogue, supporting HIV+ artists, and preserving a legacy, because AIDS is not over.

  • Event Registration

    Please fill out the form below to RSVP for the event
  • Accessibility Information

    In the interest of our immunocompromised community members, we ask that guests test for COVID-19 before attending, and stay home if they feel sick. Masks are required, and will be available at the door. The venue is wheelchair and mobility aid accessible, including accessible restrooms. Screened films will have closed captioning and subtitles available in english. At this time, we are unable to provide ASL and other language interpretation services for this event. We hope to be able to provide this accommodation in the future. 
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