Brighton-based artist Dan Mackey has been shortlisted for the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition 2026 with one of his most personal works yet.
The piece is a ceramic recreation of the coming-out letter he wrote to his mother in 2007 when he was 20 years old and in what he has described as a very dark place in his life.

That alone would make it moving.
But what gives the work even more resonance is the way it captures a moment many LGBTQ+ people will immediately understand.
It is not polished, staged, or sentimental.
It is direct, frightened, and honest.
In the letter, Mackey tells his mother that he is writing things down because he is scared she will be disappointed in him and change how she feels toward him.

He also writes that being gay is not something he would choose, but something he has to admit if he wants to be happy with himself.
That kind of language will feel painfully familiar to many queer people who grew up trying to manage other people’s expectations while barely understanding how to live with themselves.
Mackey has said that reading his old diaries now is difficult because they take him back to a time when he felt lonely, unhappy, and increasingly cut off from other people.
He described spending more time alone, growing apart from friends, and writing about hating himself and his life.
By turning that memory into ceramic, he has given it a different kind of permanence.
The material matters here.
Ceramic is heavy, tactile, and lasting, and Mackey has said he wanted the piece to feel physically the way that moment felt emotionally.
That choice makes the work more than a recreation of a letter.
It becomes a record of emotional weight.
It also turns a private act of fear into something public, visible, and shared.
The fact that the work has now been shortlisted for the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition gives that private history an even wider cultural frame.
The exhibition is one of the best-known open-submission art shows in the world, and Mackey’s inclusion places a deeply queer, deeply personal story inside one of Britain’s most established art institutions.
That feels significant in itself.
It suggests that queer life is not only worthy of representation, but of preservation.
There is also something especially affecting about where Mackey’s life stands now.

He is married to Adam Johnson, and the couple’s 2023 wedding became part of the BBC documentary Big Gay Wedding with Tom Allen.
That detail adds a quiet full-circle quality to the story.
The same person who once wrote a frightened letter to his mother is now living openly, building a creative career, and seeing his work recognized on one of the biggest stages in British art.
Mackey has also said that his relationship with his mother is strong today, and that coming out was only one part of a much larger story between them.
That matters too.
Too many coming-out narratives end at the point of confession, as if the hardest sentence is the whole story.
Mackey’s work reminds us that it is only the beginning.
What follows can include distance, healing, love, art, and a life that once seemed impossible.
That is part of what makes this piece feel so powerful.
It preserves not only fear, but survival.
And in doing so, it turns one young man’s private pain into a lasting piece of queer history.
📷 IG: @ danmakeystuff


