About

The New York City Trans Archives is dedicated to preserving transgender culture in the NYC region and beyond.

Red’s backyard, where we held our first open trans community meetings, featuring beloved feline deities, Lux and Volt!

Founded in 2023, NYCTA is the first and only trans-specific full-service archive in New York. It is entirely independent and run by and for trans people. It is located in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, Lenapehoking, with archival storage facilities in New Jersey.

As an archive dedicated to trans liberation and social justice, NYCTA focuses on ephemera that are too often left out of traditional archives, such as materials by trans women of color (particularly Black and Brown femmes), migrants, disabled people, youth, poor and working-class people, and community organizers.

Our collections will open to the public in late 2025.

Many of our founding volunteers were friends, collaborators, and accomplices of New York City-based activist Cecelia Gentili. When she unexpectedly passed in 2024, questions arose over access to her materials. Despite being among the most well-known trans activists in the city, traditional archives did not step up to collect her belongings. After much discussion, dozens of trans people throughout the city came together to form the NYC Trans Archives to ensure that the legacies of past and future trans community members – especially trans women of color – were preserved and accessible for future generations. This is especially important for elders’ legacies during this critical moment of state-sanctioned erasure.

Cecelia Gentili
Logo by Allison Page, 2025

NYCTA represents a range of communities, including those who are trans, trans women, trans men, nonbinary, genderqueer, genderfluid, two-spirit, gender non-conforming, intersex, hijras, gender variant, agender, and many other gender expansive people across the spectrum of difference. NYCTA approaches these communities intersectionally: understanding race, class, gender, ethnicity, age, religion, and ability, etc. as interlocking and connected.

The archives were never solely about our collections. Along with archival material, NYCTA offers dedicated public programming, ranging from trans youth arts workshops to trans studies courses.