en français

Archive | LGBTQ

How to Hook Up with a Sexy Israeli (NEXT Magazine)

Posted on:
October 4, 2012
Comments:
Post Comment

Israeli based promoter Eliad Cohen schools us on just what it takes to have a titillating Tel Aviv romance—just in time for the stateside debut of his party, papa.

Tensions may soon reach a boiling point in the Middle East (how about a little diplomacy, people?), but tonight the hottest thing out of Israel is Eliad Cohen and his Tel Aviv- and Madrid-inspired party, Papa. “We have tried to create a party with amazing energy,” says Cohen. “We focus on the music and production. Luckily, the crowd has responded really well,” he continues. Now Cohen is bring the party to the Big Apple, teaming up with Jared Needle for a one-night-only event featuring Hector Romero and Tel Aviv-based DJ Erez Ben Ishay.

“Our Papa parties attract some of the sexiest guys I’ve ever seen under one roof Truly,” Cohen says. And looking at his bulging biceps and charming smile, we’d definitely agree. But how can we possibly manage to land a kosher man for ourselves? We asked the Chelsea-via-Tel Aviv resident just what it takes to get the attentions of the boys of Zion.

To get Eliad’s advice click here

VIDEOS: Latest vids from Tel Aviv’s F/O/D Man Loving magazine

Posted on:
September 28, 2012
Category:
LGBTQ, Video
Comments:
Post Comment

Latest video teasers from Tel Aviv premier Man Loving Magazine F.O.D

Tel Aviv through a gay painter’s eyes

Posted on:
September 27, 2012
Category:
Arts, LGBTQ, Society
Comments:
Post Comment

Rafi Perez uses vibrant colors and naïve images to depict a ‘gay golden age’ in Israel’s second largest city.

By Abigail Klein Leichman

On now-tattered diary pages spanning his teens to twenties, Jerusalem-born Rafael Perez (http://www.artofpainting.com) poured out his inner conflict over his homosexual feelings. And then he drew over the Hebrew words with colored pencil.

“I was afraid of my homosexuality. So I covered the words with drawings because I didn’t want people to see what I wrote,” he explains. “This was a very emotional period.”

Today, the openly gay artist symbolizes the open and free atmosphere of Tel Aviv that is attracting a steady stream of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender (GLBT) tourism.

Gay rainbow colors infuse Perez’s depictions of Tel Aviv.

He was the sole artist chosen for a Tourism Ministry campaign, featuring eight Israelis from the fields of sports and culture, which is splashed across London’s billboards, newspapers and magazines. Now in its second year, the campaign has helped boost attendance at Tel Aviv’s annual Gay Pride Parade and Gay Pride week activities to more than 100,000 visitors in the past two years.

“My agenda is about gay life — that it’s okay to be gay, to live your life, to find your love,” he says.

Red hearts and rainbow flags figure prominently in his vibrant, large canvases celebrating heterosexual and homosexual love in a professional childlike style called “naïve.” Many of his works celebrate Tel Aviv itself, which has an estimated 20 percent GLBT population.

“My art is a reflection of the entire gay community — people in the closet, mature love, gay families, gay political and cultural icons,” Perez says during an interview in his spacious studio-slash-residence above a mechanic’s garage in industrial South Tel Aviv.

Perez lives in his studio in South Tel Aviv.

Imagining gay families

Born in 1965 to a traditional family, Perez and his two brothers were exposed to works of great painters, and each became an artist in his own way. One brother is an industrial designer and the other designs jewelry. But Perez didn’t intend to make his living as a painter.

Like other young Israeli men, he served three years in the military, all the while pursuing relationships with women. He then worked as a counselor for 15 years at a residential facility for kids from abusive homes. He also taught preschool sports and art, and at 23 enrolled in a Beersheva art school, where he honed his two styles: naïve and realistic.

He was 32 before he fully embraced a gay lifestyle. “It wasn’t like today, when kids come out of the closet at 15 or 16,” he says.

“I didn’t become gay all of a sudden one day. I really wanted to be successful in my relationships with women, and you can see that in my paintings from that time. My paintings helped me understand what I was feeling. People say my artwork is very happy and they don’t see my conflict with homosexuality. The truth is I was happy when working with the children, and that gave me the happiness you can see in my naïve-style art.”

His more recent series are truly conflict-free. “Gay Love Black & White,” for example, celebrates his much-publicized relationship with an Eritrean refugee, which lasted for 11 months. Another imagines Tel Aviv as an Amsterdam-like magnet for nightlife and Jerusalem as a multicultural focal point for the whole world.

“Gay Love Black & White”

Perez began painting gay families in 2000, inspired not by real-life scenes but by his imagination. That year, both his heterosexual twin brother and his ex-girlfriend had their first babies.

“I became involved with the upbringing and care of the babies, and this prompted me to start painting situations that involve gay families,” says Perez. “I was one of the few painters that dealt with this issue at that time.”

These paintings, as well as a series from 1999 anticipating a “golden age” of gay life in Israel’s second largest city, were ahead of their time and came to symbolize an open and growing trend in Tel Aviv and elsewhere.

An Internet artist

Type “gay artist” in Arabic into a Google search, and Perez’s paintings pop up first. Though his paintings are exhibited in galleries and ad campaigns in several countries – his most recent show was in Palm Springs, California — he considers himself an Internet artist who uses YouTube, Facebook and Flickr to display his works to millions of viewers.

This has had a profound effect on secretly gay residents of countries that don’t condone such a lifestyle.

“Many people write to me after they see my paintings all over the world, even Arabs in Syria and many other countries,” says Perez. “They tell me, ‘We see your stuff and now we believe there could be love.’”

He is pleased that his paintings have served as a visual advertisement for Tel Aviv, which has become a separate “brand” in tourism apart from the rest of Israel.

“Gay tourists invest much more than heterosexual tourists, maybe because they are usually childless,” Perez says. “They spend a lot at bars and restaurants in Tel Aviv.”

These same visitors to Israel exemplify his wider audience. “Most of my customers invest in art,” he says. “I owe my life to the gay community and I made my will to give back my paintings to the gay community.”

Tel Aviv: The Sexy Gay Agenda

Posted on:
September 23, 2012
Category:
LGBTQ, Tourism
Comments:
Post Comment

Tel Aviv invariably surprises the first time visitor who might be expecting someplace old world, deeply religious and possibly even a little war-torn. What they find instead is a modern city, with a strong sense of individuality, and a large contingent of pleasure-loving residents some would call archetypal hedonists. There is also a strong bohemian, anachronistic sensibility among the population. All in all it’s a city that attracts the oddballs, artists, students, intellectuals, free-thinkers….and gaggles of gays. They come not just from the rest of Israel, but from outside the country, fleeing the neighboring largely gay-phobic Arab states, as well as from Europe, Russia & the U.S. Yes, it’s a pupu platter of sexy gays from around the world.

In look and feel, the strip of Tel Aviv and neighboring Jaffa is both highly urbanized and even big-city hectic in some areas, but quiet as an ancient village in others. Built along a beautiful 14 KM sandy strip of the Mediterranean, this collection of big towns is informed by beach culture as much as anything. There’s the overpowering ease of the beach town along with the mojo of being a bona fide world class city, something very few cities really own — Sydney & Los Angeles are on that very short list. And there’s something of those cities generally relaxed qualties that’s shared here. Add to that a sense of joy at the personal freedoms of the surprisingly secular city that’s and you’ve got one groovy, fun-loving and very, very gay modern metropolis.

Continue reading Via NewOwnNext

VIDEO: A New Years greeting by the TLV Party line ‘Forever Tel Aviv’ – CAR WASH… Just another Tuesday Afternoon in TLV

Posted on:
September 13, 2012
Category:
LGBTQ, Nightlife, Video
Comments:
Post Comment

Forever “CAR WASH” Promo 14.09.12 The BLOCK
Happy Rosh Hashana Everyone

 

VIDEO: Boys of Summer / by Eitan Bernat

Posted on:
September 9, 2012
Category:
LGBTQ, Nightlife, Video
Comments:
Post Comment

The video was filmed in order to promote a new men party line in Tel-Aviv called “Mango”. Producer of the line: Moshe Avramove.