Charles Williams
A selection of Williams' art and the transcription of a 1995 interview with art historian Will Arnett are available through the Souls Grown Deep Foundation, an organization which documents and preserves the art of Black artists from the South.
Following his death, a mutual aid organization, A Moveable Feast Lexington, was founded in his honor. This organization works to reduce the harm of HIV/AIDS in Kentucky by preparing and delivering meals for those living with the virus. You can learn more about the organization, donate, or volunteer on their website.
It is also important to note that Williams' gender and sexual identity were never publicly known and that accounts of his gender and sexuality largely come from people who were acquainted with him during his life. The label of "queer" may not be completely accurate. Nevertheless, his engagement with his environment and the people around as well as the lasting legacy of his art and memory certainly gesture towards a deviation from heteronormative and cisnormative standards.
All images from the Souls Grown Deep Foundation and the Atlanta Contemporary.