Showing posts with label Robert Opel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robert Opel. Show all posts

May 8, 2021

Beemer Memory 33: Tom of Finland

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Untitled (Model & Photographer) - 1963 
 
 
 
 
Today, May 8, is the birthday of Finnish artist, Touko Valio Laaksonen, aka Tom of Finland (1920 – 1991). He is known for his stylized highly masculinized homoerotic art, and for his influence on late 20th century gay culture. He has been called the "most influential creator of gay pornographic images" by cultural historian Joseph W. Slade. Over the course of four decades, Laaksonen produced some 3,500 illustrations, mostly featuring men with exaggerated primary and secondary sex traits, wearing tight or partially removed clothing.    

 
Touko Valio Laaksonen (Tom of Finland) - 1991
 
    
When I was working with photographer Jim Stewart in 1978, I had the pleasure of meeting Laaksonen one night at the Fey-Way Studio, operated by Robert Opel, in San Francisco and found him to be a very quiet, gentle and charming man (link below). He later photographed me on my motorcycle to use as a reference for one of his drawings; I don't know if he ever did but it might have looked like this as this was one of the poses he photographed and I had a mustache, but everybody had one back then, so, maybe not.      



    
In celebration of the 100th anniversary of his birth, Fotografiska (The Swedish Museum of Photography) in collaboration with Tom of Finland Foundation produced The Darkroom, an exciting study of the life and work process of Laaksonen. The exhibition, curated by Berndt Arell, travels from Stockholm to New York in time for Tom of Finland’s 101st birthday (8th May).     
 
Fotografiska New York
281 Park Ave South at 22nd St.
New York, NY 10010
212-433-FOTO    
30th Apr 2021 – 20th Aug 2021 @ 11:00 am – 9:00 pm     
    
The exhibition consists of photographic portraits which served as reference images for his famed homoerotic drawings. 
 
 
Tom of Finland ~ Aarno -1976
Silver Gelatin Print  
 
 
These photographs were confined to Laaksonen’s home studio and darkroom, displaying them elsewhere would have risked a prison sentence, as homosexuality was criminalized and classified as a mental disorder in his native Finland.      

In 1988, Laaksonen spoke at the California Institute of the Arts in Santa Clarita, California (link below).      

His work has inspired fashion as well as art. A show of those fashions had super-handsome, super-macho models any one of which could have been an inspiration for one of his drawings. The opening featured the song by Aussie music producer Rob Dougan, Clubbed To Death, complete with howling wolves, of course.
     

Tom of Finland fashion show - 1988 
photographer unknown
 
 
Finland issued three postage stamps with his drawings in his honor. The stamps are the work of Finnish designer Timo Berry and are based on drawings by Laaksonen. The stamps were announced by the Finnish postal service Itella Posti Oy in April 2014 and were released on September 8. They are considered to be the world's first depicting homoerotic art. The German Tagesspiegel called the series a Kassenschlager (blockbuster), a world-wide box office success.   



 
The above image is one of the stamps on the sheet with the three drawings by Tom of FinlandItella Posti Oy said that the Tom of Finland stamps were already the most popular ever in terms of media attention.   
 



Art critic Estelle Lovatt said the stamps were a "great statement"; she and others including Mark Joseph Stern, writer of an LGBTQ blog at Slate, noted that Finland then had not yet legalized same-sex marriage. In Finland, an online petition called for cancellation of the issue as "[neither] aesthetically beautiful [nor] culturally valuable", and the Christian-owned department store chain Halpa-Halli [fi] refused to stock them. The issue of the stamps ran parallel to public debate on legalization of gay marriage in the same year; a bill for legalization was approved by the Parliament on 12 December 2014.     
 
A film, Tom of Finland, was released by Protagonist Pictures and debuted in 2017 at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York City. Aleksi Bardy wrote the screenplay, which tells the life story of Laaksonen, who would become known around the world by his nom de guerre, “Tom of Finland.”    


movie poster

    
Also, Tom of Finland, a musical, premiered on January 27, 2017, at the City Theatre in Turku, Finland, where Laaksonen is considered a national hero. The music was written by Jori Sjöroos and directed by Tuomas Parkkinen with choreography by Reija Wäre. She said the Turku City Theatre received complaints even before the musical was premiered, as the production included child actors and it was presumed that the musical’s topic would not be suitable for children. The creative team was kept unaware of this criticism, and the premiere went ahead as planned.     
 
 
Tom of Finland, a musical, Then - 2017
 
 

Tom of Finland, a musical, Now - 2017
 
 
 
    
Viewfinder links:    
   
Styrous®   
    
Net links:     
    
ArtNet News ~ Tom of Finland’s Homoerotic Stamps Are a Hit     
Peccadillo Pictures ~ Tom of London?         
Tom of Finland Foundation ~ The Dark Room     
Xtra Magazine ~ Touring LA: Tom of Finland Foundation          
         
YouTube links:     
     
Tom of Finland ~       
Tom of Finland Movie ~    
      movie trailer             
      Doug and Jack             
      How Tom got his name            
fashion show    
Made in Germany     
MOCA ~ Tom of Finland            
A National Hero             
Tom of Finland Speaks at Calarts pt. 1             
Tom of Finland Speaks at Calarts pt. 2             
Durk Dehner ~   
    
    
    
    
"To me, a fully dressed man is more erotic than a naked one."  
                               ~ Tom of Finland
    
    
    
    
Styrous® ~ Saturday, May 8, 2021     



















October 11, 2020

Touko Laaksonen (Tom of Finland) articles/mentions

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Beemer Memory 33: Tom of Finland    
      
mentions:              
Drummer Magazine      
Jim Stewart ~ Perfervid Photographer    
      
      
      
       
      
             
photographer unknown 


            



















November 21, 2018

Jim Stewart ~ Perfervid Photographer

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A month or so ago my friend and photographer Jim Stewart (links below) died just short of his seventy-sixth birthday. I was his model in 1982 for a series of photographs he did for advertisement posters for the Leatherneck Bar (link below), articles in the Bay Area Reporter and he photographed several performances of mine as well.              


Styrous® ~ performance - 1977
photo by Jim Stewart


Jim was born on November 11, 1942. He earned his master's degree at Western Michigan University and documented the Leather Lifestyle in the mid to early 80's with his 2011 memoir, Folsom Street Blues which included many of his photographs.        

Folsom Street Blues
by Jim Stewart
book cover photo by Jim Stewart


He was a columnist for the Bay Area Reporter BARtab section (link below), a Folsom Street leather pioneer, a gay man, the cover model of his award-winning 2011 memoir, "Folsom Street Blues," and a photographer for Drummer magazine (link below). In 1976, he was among the first leather artists to move South of Market to Clementina Street.        

According to BARtab editor Jim Provenzano, Stewart contributed to the nightlife section several years ago. He also wrote the section's BARchive gay bar history column in 2013 and 2014, which included many of his historic 1970s gay nightlife photos of South of the Slot bars, Halloween, and the Russian River scene.     


Tom Hinde - 1979
photo by Jim Stewart


While managing a movie theater in 1973, Jim met Jack Fritscher, a writer, who sponsored his move to San Francisco in 1975.          


photo by Mark Hemry


Although our names are not mentioned, Jim and I were subjects in the Fritscher book, Some Dance To Remember.



Fritscher said that as a member of the SOMA Open Studio movement, Jim chronicled the creative epiphanies of the Folsom Street art scene with intimate friends he wrote about such as Tool Box bar founder Chuck Arnett, leather poet Camille O'Grady, whose performance at the Ambush Bar on Harrison Street I recorded in the early 80's . . .      


 Camille O'Grady 
photo by Glenda Hydler


. . . Old Reliable Studio photographer David Hurles and 1974 Oscar streaker Robert Opel who ran naked behind David Niven flashing a peace sign while Niven was introducing Elizabeth Taylor.




As a working carpenter in 1977, Jim built the interior of Fey-Way Studio, at 1287 Howard Street, where founder Opel exhibited his work alongside Robert Mapplethorpe, Tom of Finland, and Rex, in the gallery where Opel was murdered in 1979. I did the sound design for a couple of the exhibition openings at the gallery. Jim appeared in Uncle Bob, the 2010 documentary film about the Opel killing.

Jim wrote fiction for the Jim Moss, Folsom magazine, he shot photos for the Society for Individual Rights and documented the  Christo and Jeanne-Claude "Running Fence." He founded his Keyhole Studios in 1976.      

Jim's images of Folsom Street sexuality, including his iconic photos shot in the Slot Hotel, appeared in exhibits at bars like the Ambush; in Drummer as early as issue 14, May 1977; and in the 2008 book "Gay San Francisco."      

He managed and photographed various Folsom leather bars in San Francisco; Allan Lowery's Leatherneck (links below) and later, at the same location after the Leatherneck closed and it became the Drummer Key Club, at 11th and Folsom streets, which is now the Oasis nightclub.   

Jim left San Francisco in the 1980s when he was hired as head of the Chicago Public Library Social Sciences and History Department.  
      
Jim Stewart died on October 15, 2018, at his home in Ludington, Michigan, where he had retired. The cause of death was pneumonia two days after he broke his ankle in a fall. He was 75 years old. He is survived by Kenneth Warner his partner of 35 years; they were married in California in 2008.            
        
  
     
    
Viewfinder links:        
       
Jim Stewart         
1977 CARNIFAIR ~ Dancin' for the Seamen       
Leatherneck bar, San Francisco, 1977      
Leatherneck, Pillow, a Hungry i
Leatherneck posters     
         
Net links:        
       
Bay Area Reporter ~ Jim Stewart obit
Bilerico Project ~ Jim Stewart: SoMa Survivor obit    
Found San Francisco ~ Folsom Street: The Miracle Mile    
Foreward Reviews ~ Folsom Street Blues review     
Lambda Literary Foundation ~
       Folsom Street Blues: A Memoir of 1970’s SoMa review  
BARtab ~ Jim Stewart: Folsom Street Leather   
         
             


Jim was intense and impassioned 
but a sweeter soul never lived!


         
             
Styrous® ~ Wednesday, November 21, 2018    
         
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October 10, 2014

Beemer Memory 8 ~ Drummer Magazine


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In the late seventies, I modeled for articles in Drummer Magazine. One article in particular I remember was on how to do full body and other body parts casting (couldn't be shy here). Some of the photographers I worked with were Jim Stewart (see Beemer links below), Peter Munekee and Gene Weber whose work can now be found in the James C. Hormel Gay and Lesbian Collection at the San Francisco Public Library.

Drummer Magazine was a publication for the man with an interest in the leather subculture in mind. It was founded by John Embry and Jeanne Barney in Los Angeles in 1975. Due to police harassment, it relocated to San Francisco in 1977 with Jack Fritscher as editor-in-chief from 1977 to 1979.


cover art by Rex
photo of cover by Styrous®


Drummer Magazine delineated leather as a lifestyle and masculinity as an ideal. It featured quality writings about leather but also served as a platform for erotic art and photography. Some of its writers and artists were Phil Andros, Tim Barrus, Scott Masters, Camille O'Grady, Tom of Finland, Robert Opel and Larry Townsend who wrote The Leatherman's Handbook, the bible for the Leatherman.

my well-worn copy of the book




I did the sound design for several exhibition/events at the Fey Way Studios owned by Robert Opel and it was were I met Touko Laaksonen aka Tom of Finland in 1978. Somewhere I have a calendar for that year that he autographed.

 Fey Way Studios 1st Anniversary poster
poster art work by Camille O'Grady
photo of poster by Styrous®



Drummer Magazine held annal International Mr Drummer contests in San Francisco, CA from 1981 to 1999. They were pretty raucous events and tons of fun.

The last issue of Drummer Magazine was published in April of 1999.




Sites for more information:
 
A Hell Of A Run: Leather Publishing And San Francisco
                         from leatherpage.com, archived at archive.org 
The Leather Archive & Museum
Jack Fritcher interview on YouTube  

informaton about Drummer Magazine by Jack Fritcher  
Back2stonewall  
Leather Life 




Beemer Memories  
Memory 4 ~ Leatherneck bar, San Francisco   
Memory 5 ~ Leatherneck bar, S. F., Pt. 2  
Memory 10 ~ 1977 CARNIFAIR ~ Dancin' for the Seamen   
Memory 11 ~ Leatherneck posters  



Those were exciting, wild and intense times in the history of gay S F. 
I'm glad I was there to experience them.



Styrous® ~ Friday, October 10, 2014 

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