Tom — Of Finland -2017- !!link!!
He looks at a print on his wall: "Kake 16" (1978). The original Tom figure—Kake, the archetypal blond god—is locked in a three-way embrace with two uniformed men. There is joy there. A specific, illegal, dangerous joy. The kind of joy that could get you fired, arrested, or killed.
The man in the Berlin loft is not sketching a sailor. He is swiping. He pauses on a profile: "29, muscle bear, gear, no fems." The language is Tom’s—the taxonomy of hypermasculinity—but the context has corroded. What was once a radical act of self-creation (the dandy of the underground) has become a rigid expectation. tom of finland -2017-
Returning to a post-war Helsinki where homosexuality was criminalized and "shunned," Touko lived a double life. By day, he was a commercial artist; by night, he retreated to his room to draw the "beefy lumberjacks," "saucy sailors," and square-jawed bikers that would eventually make him famous. Beyond the "Obscene" He looks at a print on his wall: "Kake 16" (1978)
The film follows Laaksonen (played by Pekka Strang) from his harrowing service as a Finnish officer in to his eventual status as a global gay icon. A specific, illegal, dangerous joy
In 2017, Tom of Finland's passing was met with an outpouring of tributes and condolences from the art world and beyond. The artist's legacy was celebrated through exhibitions, retrospectives, and reissues of his work, including a major show at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Helsinki.
Key historical and narrative milestones in the film include:
In 2017, Tom of Finland’s art appeared on:






