Artist Yanni De Melo Yanni De Melo’s photograph “Self Love” won best in show on Saturday, Nov. 2 at the ArtsUnited juried exhibit, “Catch the Moment.” (Photo by Dennis Dean)
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Organization took over HOTspots Happening Out Art Gallery on Dixie Highway

-Steve Rothaus, BAJA

Dennis Dean developed his love for photography as a gay teen in the 1970s, using the art form to escape being bullied in small-town Alabama.

“I just wanted to find a way to get those bullies to smile back at me,” recalls Dean, a longtime Fort Lauderdale photographer known for documenting South Florida’s diverse LGBTQ community. “Sure enough, it worked. Photography was the answer.”

Dennis Dean-in gallery studio with camera
Fort Lauderdale photographer Dennis Dean has documented South Floridas LGBTQ community since the mid 1990s He is now executive director of the ArtsUnited Gallery in Wilton Manors Photo self portrait by Dennis Dean

Dean is now executive director of ArtsUnited, a nonprofit Broward organization formed 25 years ago to help LGBTQ artists promote themselves and their work. In September, ArtsUnited acquired the HOTspots Happening Out Art Gallery at 2401 Dixie Highway on Wilton Manors’ growing North Dixie Highway arts district, which Dean had managed.

As a student at Sylacauga High School in Alabama, Dean shot yearbook photos and athletic events, making him a well-liked local personality. Sylacauga photographer Don Smith mentored the teen, teaching him “everything about the camera and the darkroom,” recalls Dean.

Interesting tidbit about Sylacauga, a small rural city 40 miles southeast of Birmingham: Its most famous hometown hero happens to be another gay man – TV’s Gomer Pyle, the late singer and actor Jim Nabors.

Jim Nabors TVs Gomer Pyle and photographer Dennis Dean both came from the same small hometown Sylacauga Alabama They met once in 1993 and had dinner together after a Nabors concert Photo courtesy of Dennis Dean

Dinner with ‘Gomer Pyle’

By 1993, Dean had worked 10 years as executive director of the Birmingham Summerfest theater company. Through that job he met Nabors, who was in town to perform a concert. After the show, the two went to dinner. “I want to invite you,” Nabors told Dean, who grew up blocks from the Jim Nabors Highway. “I want to talk about our interests, what we have in common.”

Nabors, who at the time was publicly closeted – and falsely rumored to be in a secret marriage with movie star Rock Hudson – confided to Dean he had a partner in Hawaii “and that we have a great life, but a private life.”

In 2017, Nabors died at 87 in Honolulu. Dean recalls the simple advice he gave him during their dinner together: “Enjoy your life.”

Dean, 61, says he took Nabors’ advice and in 1995 moved to South Florida, where he became general manager of the now defunct Fort Lauderdale Players theater company.

Hobby becomes career

“My photography was a hobby, shooting actors and models for headshots,” says Dean. “Then, I met an art director from the [gay] publication ‘David’ magazine and he said, ‘Oh my gosh, I love your photography.’ He was looking at my work on the walls of my house. He said, ‘Whose is that?’ I said it’s mine. He said, ‘Would you do our covers? We need somebody with this artistic eye.’”

“It changed my path because my hobby became my career,” says Dean, a blonde, bespectacled Andy Warhol lookalike. “It really worked out.”

Lookalike photographers Andy Warhol and Dennis Dean met once in 1985 New York Warhols advice to young Dean Dont take pictures make photographs Photo courtesy of Dennis Dean

In 1999, Dean joined the newly formed ArtsUnited.

Throughout the years, ArtsUnited has hosted exhibits at local galleries and displayed members’ art at the Broward County Main Library in downtown Fort Lauderdale.

The group also became known for its annual ArtExplosion festival with visual and performance art events throughout South Florida.

ArtsUnited’s paid membership in 2010 hovered at about 100. It eventually plummeted into the 20s, says Dean, who joined the organization’s volunteer board in 2016.

Even before the COVID pandemic, it became clear to Dean and other board members that ArtsUnited might not survive. Fundraising and membership revenue dropped from $45,574 in 2018 to $22,159 in 2019.

‘We can’t let this die’

“I was like, ‘Oh my gosh, we can’t let this die because this is so great for our community,’” recalls Dean. “There were a handful of us who said, ‘Yes, we will take over.’

“That’s when I became the vice president and wanted to take this to the next level, bringing in artists to build the membership base. That’s what we’re doing.”

In addition to the gallery, ArtsUnited now has four levels of annual memberships: $20 for students, $60 individual artist memberships, $90 artist family memberships and $150 “art lover” memberships for others who support the organization.

Individual and family memberships provide artists with space on the ArtsUnited website to display their bios, social media addresses, contact information and work samples.

Dean says ArtsUnited membership is now more than 220.

After serving as ArtsUnited’s board vice president since 2019, Dean stepped down in July to become the group’s full-time executive director.

“The wonderful thing about Dennis Dean is that he is just such a trailblazer in his own right, but he always sets the path for other aspiring artists,” says colleague Fay Albernas, host of “The Fay What?! Show” on Happening Out Television Network, a streaming television service that originates in Fort Lauderdale, broadcasting out of a space at Sunshine Cathedral. “When he was head of the HOTspots Happening Out Gallery, he put on these exhibitions every month. People were going there to see Dennis Dean’s portraits and his pictures, but he made it about the new, up-and-coming artists.”

Fay Albernas South Florida host of Happening Out Televisions Fay What Show posed for a 2023 Breast Cancer Awareness Month portrait by Dennis Dean after her double mastectomy three years ago Photo courtesy of Dennis Dean

Breast cancer awareness exhibit

Albernas, herself, is one of Dean’s best-known recent models.

Three years ago, she underwent a double mastectomy after being diagnosed with breast cancer.

Dean’s sister, Donna Dean Phillips, died of breast cancer in 2012, days before her 52nd birthday. In October 2023, Dean organized a gallery exhibit for Breast Cancer Awareness Month.

He asked Albernas to pose for an exhibit photo similar to one he shot of Donna when she was ill. “He wanted to make something that would be memorable and would remind him of his sister,” she says.

In the updated photo, Albernas is nude except for a large pink ribbon draped around her body.

“We named it ‘Wrapped in Strength,’” says Albernas, a co-anchor on HOTspots Happening Out’s daily “Queer News Tonight” program.

Dennis Dean curated an exhibition inside the Dixie Highway gallery for Breast Cancer Awareness month in 2023 Photo by Dennis Dean

Each month, Dean curates a new exhibit at the ArtsUnited Gallery. Through Saturday, Dec. 28, it’s ArtsUnited Best of Show.

In January, it’s “Collabulous,” a collaboration of five local visual artists, Joel Baxter, Enrique Cirino, Rafael Farello, Axel Martinez and Robert Reda, who will interpret Dean’s photographic works. The exhibition opens with a reception at 7 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 4 and runs through Saturday, Jan. 25.

In November, Dean presented “Catch the Moment,” the gallery’s first juried photography exhibit.

Edward Hashek, immediate past president of Funding Arts Broward (FAB), which supports local visual and performing arts, and his husband, landscape designer John Jors, were invited by Dean to be judges.

“It was an honor to be asked. I’ve been involved with the arts from more of a volunteer perspective for probably 40-some years,” says Hashek, a retired IT executive who served on arts boards in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and now lives with Jors primarily in Fort Lauderdale.

Fort Lauderdale arts philanthropist Edward Hashek speaks to attendees at the Saturday Nov 2 ArtsUnited Gallery opening of the juried photographic exhibit Catch the Moment Photo by Dennis Dean

The day before the official exhibit opening, Hashek and Jors visited ArtsUnited Gallery and looked at 67 pieces of art representing 30 artists.

“We went around on our own and we just kind of did our first scan,” says Hashek. “And then he and I discussed what made this artwork important, or what did it say to us? That’s how we got down to the six that were recognized. The good thing about doing it the day before – none of the pieces of art had labels on them in terms of [artist’s] name, or even title.”

An ‘impressive’ event

The night of the opening, Hashek was startled not just by the quality of the art, but also by the attendance.

“This event was so impressive,” he says. “You could barely move in the gallery that night. Plus, I’m impressed with ArtsUnited in terms of the diversity of the types of art. It’s not just photography. It’s different visual arts. But it’s also performance art. I think that is a real hallmark of having, through different channels, an impact on the arts here in Broward. I think it’s such a positive organization for the arts community here in Broward.”

Best in show: ‘Self Love’

The photograph they deemed best in show was a black-and-white portrait of two nude men, their arms around each other, by photographer Yanni De Melo of Coral Springs.

It’s actually two self-portraits of De Melo digitally combined into a single photograph and titled “Self Love.”

“The most challenging aspect about it was to make sure the poses were going to be synchronized together when I would do the final edit,” says De Melo. “But setting up the lights and putting everything into a self-timer, to me, it’s not that difficult anymore. The most challenging thing is working in the post-production of it, to make sure it unifies together.”

The award winning photo Self Love by Broward photographer Yanni De Melo is a carefully composed composite of two self portraits by the artist Photo courtesy of Yanni De Melo

Like Dean, De Melo was a teenager when he first studied photography. After graduating from William T. McFatter Technical High School in Davie, De Melo earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in photography at Barry University in Miami Shores.

De Melo first met Dean about 10 years ago.

“I was a student of yoga at the time, so I was like very bendy. I was known at the time for my yoga, so that’s how Dennis came into my life, and he shot me doing yoga poses,” recalls De Melo. “We remained in touch throughout these years through social media.”

When De Melo learned Dean was involved with ArtsUnited, he decided to join.

De Melo says ArtsUnited serves an important role in the arts community.

“It’s truly a beacon for local artists. Not only just for local artists, but for LGBTQ artists,” says De Melo. “Wilton Manors has always been such a supportive community for me and for many other people that I know. This is our neighborhood.”

De Melo also appreciates having Dean as a mentor.

“I’m 31 now. I was 20 years old when I met Dennis. I was still in school and was very much finding my style,” says De Melo. “At the time when Dennis photographed me, and I was exposed to his work, I really appreciated his photography and I felt it was very inspiring for me.

“He really is an inspiring figure – not just for myself but for many people.”

The interior of the ArtsUnited Gallery on Dixie Highway in Wilton Manors Photo by Dennis Dean

IF YOU GO

WHAT: ArtsUnited Gallery

WHERE: 2401 N. Dixie Hwy., Wilton Manors

WHEN: Gallery hours, 2 p.m. to 7 p.m., Sunday through Friday, 7 to 10 p.m., first and third Saturdays.

COST: Admission to the gallery is free.

INFORMATION: (954) 240-8307; artsunitedflorida.com/ 

This story was produced by Broward Arts Journalism Alliance (BAJA), an independent journalism program of the Broward County Cultural Division. Visit ArtsCalendar.com for more stories about the arts in South Florida.

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