in Environmental Planning was awarded in the College of Environmental Design of the University of California, Berkeley and he has taught and held appointments at Berkeley, Santa Cruz and The University of British Columbia, among other institutions. Much of his work has involved either conservation initiatives by indigenous and other tribal communities or sexual minorities increasingly engaged with decision-making around public space. is a scholar and practitioner of environmental planning and design. States currently lives and works in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. His works are part of the permanent collections of Light Work in Syracuse, New York well as the Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine Art at Auburn University in Auburn, Alabama. His work has been exhibited at venues nationwide including Hous Projects, New York Greg Kucera Gallery, Seattle and FLUXspace, Philadelphia, among others. States was an Artist in Residence at Light Work in the summer of 2009 and received the Emerging Artist Fellowship for the Delaware Division of the arts in 2008. Cruising exposes this time-honored, gay tradition, dragging it out of the woods and into the light of the public eye.ĬHAD STATES earned a BA from Evergreen State College and an MFA from Tyler School of Art. From the Pacific Northwest back east to Pennsylvania and New York, States obscures his subjects in the foliage of the woods and blends the various locations into one sensuous visual representation of this necessary, yet transgressive act. These are the beautiful and surreal spaces where forbidden fantasies come to life. With an oblique focus on hidden clearings, forest-lined parking lots, and the well-trodden paths where these encounters occur, States gradually began to include the men far off in the distance within his lush, dense landscapes. It is these spots, nationwide, and the men making use of them, that Chad States photographs in Cruising. Over the years, men with particular desires found spaces-certain parks, public restrooms, and roadside wooded groves-out of sight and yet in plain view, where they could meet, and with the use of silent signals and cues, pair off for intimate encounters. “Cruising” has always been a part of gay culture the word itself is a code, innocuous to outsiders, but representing an incognito hunt for sexual partners to those in the know.