In this article, “narrative inquiry” is used to review the author’s experience as curator of a Taiwanese exhibition on homosexuality entitled “Visualizing Others: An Artistic Puzzle of Lesbian and Gay Stories.” This exhibition was organized together with Taiwan Tongzhi Hotline Association (TTHA, the first registered national LGBT organization in Taiwan), Prof. Nian-Hua Lai (an art therapist) and Mr. Ming-Ji Wang (a senior LGBT counselor) in 2003. The relationships among the museum, the LGBT exhibition and “action research” are described. In addition, the author’s writings of and reflections on the “Visualizing Others” exhibition from the viewpoint of a primary museum staff member are discussed. Finally, some cases studies of overseas LGBT-related exhibitions are cited and suggestions for Taiwanese museums to transcend the stigmatization of homosexuality by the promotion of “exhibition curating as praxis” are provided.