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View 772 rults for gay,ic strips om , the world's largt ic strip se for onle classic strips likeCalv and Hobb, Baby Blu, Non Sequur, Get Fuzzy, Luann, Pearl Before Swe, 9 Chickweed Lane and more! * gay hunk comic *

The se you are about to enter ntas ntent that is homoerotic and graphic nature. If you are unr the age of 18, offend by gay ntent, or superhero peril, TURN AWAY NOW! Tom of Fland and Bill Ward of Dm fame are gay artists whose work I greatly admire, as well as the humor and imagatn of Roberta Gregory, Howard Cse's precise le and sophistited storytellg, and Ivan Velez 's ic/soap opera Tal Of the Closet.

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But 100 years on om his birth, how do they stand up now, asks Nick Laaksonen’s groundbreakg gay erotic art has ma him a global in. For more than 50 years until his ath 1991, the artist better known as ‘Tom of Fland’ drew gay men a way that was radil: his mcular young hunks were happy, playful and unashamedly sexual, whout beg like this:- Why do gay men love Judy Garland?

THE SEXED-UP RTOON HUNKS THAT FED GAY CULTURE

- The troubled legacy of an inic rtHis work, which he liked to ll ‘dirty drawgs’, first found an dience on the gay unrground the 1950s and 1960s, but sce then has edged ever closer to mastream acceptance. Equally, Tom of Fland’s ifitn of a certa type of gay man – mcular and avowedly mascule – hasn’t necsarily enared him to all rners of the LGBTQ muny. His fluential drawgs of men leather and biker outfs helped to spire the popular Gay Clone look that Freddie Mercury and Frankie Go to Hollywood adopted and brought to the mastream, but also ma his work appear exclnary to other queer though I had to hi my own sir – or maybe bee of – I started drawg fantasi of ee and happy gay men – Tom LaaksonenIn the 2011 book Tom of Fland: Life and Work of a Gay Hero, Dehner reflected that members of an activist group lled Queer Natn “protted [Too] not long after his ath, llg him a ‘sell out’ – only drawg what they saw as ‘straights’.

” And 2020, Tom of Fland’s stylised hunks uld look like the embodiment of the toxic ‘masc4masc’ culture that pervas gay datg apps, shamg queer men who prent a more femme of Fland’s drawgs were herently subversive – bee they dared to prent imagery that mastream society wasn’t ready to acceptHowever, ’s important not to separate Tom of Fland’s drawgs om the historil ntext which he created them. “At the time when I beme aware of my sexual orientatn, before World War Two, all gay activy was forbidn by law most untri, ” Laaksonen wr the preface to his 1988 book, Retrospective I. Laaksonen, born 1920 and raised by schoolteacher parents a small town southwtern Fland, says the first gay men he enuntered “felt ashamed and guilty, like [they were] belongg to a lower human tegory” as a rult of the prejudice they faced.

He also acknowledg that his creativy was a reactn to this shame, sayg: “Even though I had to hi my own sir – or maybe bee of – I started drawg fantasi of ee and happy gay men. ”Creatg a new stereotypeWhat’s more, Laaksonen veloped his distctive athetic – a homoerotic fantasy world populated by gay men who epomised physil fns and male sirabily – as a rrective rponse to the particular, rctive way which gay men were portrayed at the time. Even if Laaksonen’s drawgs now seem to perpetuate the stereotype of gay men as herently sexual and supremely body-nsc, they were once groundbreakg for this very reason.

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“Pop culture reprentatns of gay and queer men the first half of the 20th Century are domated by the image of the ‘pansy’, ” says Dr Jt Bengry, who ns the Queer History urse at Goldsmhs, Universy of London. Bengry says that the ‘pansy’ homosexual was variably portrayed as “effete” and “the butt of the joke”. “He’s showg that homoerotic sire n be mascule, valid, fun and playful.

”His work ptur a raw sexual energy that’s unashamed, punk, rebell, fantastil, sleazy and most importantly very funny – Chris WellerTom of Fland’s gleeful and very gay brand of sexual eedom still ronat today – more than 60 years after his first drawg was published. ”Tom of Fland’s mcular young hunks were a reactn agast the portrayal of gay men as effete – but arguably have proved exclnary their hyper-masculyHicks says Tom of Fland’s work don’t jt feel dangero bee of s overt queerns, but also “bee of the way he’s playg wh subcultur like leather and BDSM and the way he’s playg wh race”.

”The polics of beefkBut another way, Tom of Fland’s unashamedly gay drawgs were herently polil – namely, bee they dared to prent imagery that mastream society wasn’t ready to accept. Laaksonen had been drawg for his own pleasure sce the 30s, but 1956 he submted one of his efforts to the Amerin beefke magaze Physique Pictorial and had published – that was when edor Bob Mizer gave him the psdonym ‘Tom of Fland’ of Fland’s work Physique Pictorial was so gay that uldn’t be any gayer but jt bodybuildg-y enough that uld be gotten away wh – Dr Jam HicksThough publitns like Physique Pictorial were ostensibly prented as bodybuildg manuals celebratg the male form, many were sentially purveyors of gay eroti hidg pla sight. Unlike gay pornography, beefke magaz uld be sold on Amerin newsstands and sent through the US mail.

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