A nude woman, her dark brown hair in long braids, stands in the middle of the forest, tersely conversing with a fully clothed park ranger. The woman is Jean Mountaingrove, who in the 1970s and '80s was co-publisher of the lesbian feminist quarterly WomanSpirit and organizer of a women-only gathering of the same name.
The encounter took place more than 40 years ago, and the photo of it, shot by Minnesota-born Carolyn "Meadow" Muska, could've gotten Mountaingrove into trouble.
Women discovered to be lesbians back then were at risk of losing their jobs or kids. They still felt the effects of laws that had barred gays from working in the federal government with the threat of being fired if they were found out, and still remembered the McCarthy era's "Lavender Scare." It was a contentious time to identify as queer, even as a rights movement emerged. For that reason, Muska kept this photo under wraps.
It and other Muska photographs have come out in a big way at the Minneapolis Institute of Art as one of 30 black-and-white photos in "Strong Women, Full of Love: The Photography of Meadow Muska," organized by curator of photography Casey Riley.
"There's an immediacy and an intimacy to Meadow's camera work that lends itself to that feeling of, 'I know that I've seen this,' " said Riley. "Her subjects are so present — they are her friends, these open, smiling-at-you faces."
Muska's photos capture her world, from self-sustaining lesbian communities on off-the-grid rural lands to LGBTQ rights protests, lesbian-run cafes and bookstores, communal women-only living spaces in south Minneapolis, to homemade gay lady erotica.
Because her subjects knew the stakes of being outed, every photograph was built on a basis of trust and consent.
"I didn't take these photos of people and subjects," said Muska. "We created them together."