When Tom of Finland (born Touko Laaksonen in May 1920) died on this day in 1991, he left behind him a legacy few artists would have dared; a body of work as oversized as the bodies his work depicted - 3500 drawings in all - the vast majority of them explicitly gay in nature. Love them or hate them (there seems to be no middle ground) they represent a huge risk taken by the artist who drew them, and for many years a similar risk for the men who possessed them.
Informed by an early attraction to working men, Laaksonen gradually morphed into the grand-daddy of the leather scene, demonstrating an unabashed appreciation for tough guys, uniforms, and even - horror of horrors! - 'sexualizing the enemy' (which is a phrase professional homosexuals use). If nothing else, he helped to disabuse the notion that gay male sex was some lavender-scented thing that happened between two hairdressers but an all-male activity - unlike those butch straights, whose boinking always includes at least one delicate, floral-scented female.
With all this talk about man-on-man action (not to mention the research I was forced to do) I have to go now and... Uh... Lavender-scent my hairdresser*.
*Which is an extraordinary euphemism, I must admit!
*
Kake!
ReplyDeleteI see my comment bait worked.
ReplyDeleteI'm torn between two possible responses:
a) Who wants Kake?
b) There's always room for Kake!
As a gay man whose sexuality has been much-informed (for good or ill or a bit of both) by porn, I must defer to the master of the erotic.
I must have been about 11 the first time I saw one of his drawings, and I still have the weird feeling in my tummy whenever I see them, even as unrealistic as they are.
I really like much of his work and had one piece until the divorce and "the other half" got it. : (
ReplyDelete