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Thread started 01/31/06 11:37am

Heiress

Question for Tom of Finland fans...

what's up with all the boots?

seems to be a recurring motif.

this is a serious question... i'm working on a history of "dandyism," and the guys in these cartoons are just about as dandyish as you get, in their own way...
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Reply #1 posted 01/31/06 11:41am

Posthumous

i guess it's a form of dandyism...boots are a big part of the "look" of the particular hypermasculinized leather fetish subculture he was depecting in his illustrations...it's part of the uniform, like the leather jackets, the caps, the chaps, etc.

if you're talking about dandyism in its broadest form, then yeah...i guess this could be a good example...but if you're talking about dandyism as it's come to be seen in recent times - as a very quaint, fey, delicate kind of self-coding, i'm not so sure it would fit...quentin crisp these guys ain't. smile
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Reply #2 posted 01/31/06 11:46am

Heiress

Posthumous said:

i guess it's a form of dandyism...boots are a big part of the "look" of the particular hypermasculinized leather fetish subculture he was depecting in his illustrations...it's part of the uniform, like the leather jackets, the caps, the chaps, etc.

if you're talking about dandyism in its broadest form, then yeah...i guess this could be a good example...but if you're talking about dandyism as it's come to be seen in recent times - as a very quaint, fey, delicate kind of self-coding, i'm not so sure it would fit...quentin crisp these guys ain't. smile


the true meaning of "dandy" is a man who devotes a lot of time and energy to his appearance... so yeah, they would be dandies. how much time does a man take to build up all that muscle, for instance?

so the boots is a leatherman thang...hmmm

i'm looking at some gay subculture for my thesis, especially on the British side where the New Romantic club scene originated. for some reason, i thought of Freddy Mercury, which in turn made me think of Tom of Finland. That had to be where the "Village People" idea originally came from too. smile

was Robert Mappelthorpe inspired by Tom? methinks so...
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Reply #3 posted 01/31/06 11:48am

Posthumous

i think tom of finland was definitely an influence on mapplethorpe...have you thought of looking into tom of finland's influences? you'll probably hit a goldmine of info you're looking for there. i know there are a couple of good taschen art books with very informative interviews and background info on the artist and where his sensibilities originated.
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Reply #4 posted 01/31/06 11:52am

Heiress

Posthumous said:

i think tom of finland was definitely an influence on mapplethorpe...have you thought of looking into tom of finland's influences? you'll probably hit a goldmine of info you're looking for there. i know there are a couple of good taschen art books with very informative interviews and background info on the artist and where his sensibilities originated.


please share some book titles, if it's handy for you to do so...

the word "hypermasculinized" itself makes me think of michaelangelo.

this is what i just found in an amazon review of a book about tom of F:

From Publishers Weekly
More than the work of any other gay erotic artist, Tom of Finland's images of overdeveloped butch bikers, loggers and military men engaging in explicitly sexual activity helped define a gay aesthetic that has influenced such mainstream artists as Robert Mapplethorpe and Bruce Weber, as well as sexuality and masculinity in popular culture.

Ramakers, an art historian born and based in Belgium, surveys the career of Tom of Finland--the nom de gay of Touko Laaksonen, born in Finland in 1920--from his earliest publications of the 1950s in Physique Pictorial, a homoerotic U.S. muscle magazine, to his many gallery and museum shows and his lucrative sales at Christie's.

Astutely delineating Tom of Finland's influences--from Renaissance religious art to the work of Paul Cadmus, Charles Demuth and Kenneth Anger--Ramakers places his subject in the context of both high and commercial art. Drawing upon such diverse sources as Laura Mulvey's feminist film and literary theory, George Chauncey's history Gay New York and Kobena Mercer's critical race theory, Ramakers confronts the charges of misogyny, internalized homophobia and racism that have surrounded the artist's work. His discussion of Tom of Finland's idealized view of masculinity and its relationship to state-sponsored art of the Third Reich is nuanced and illuminating. Ultimately, Ramakers makes a convincing case for viewing Tom of Finland's work as highly political, anti-homophobic pedagogy as well as sex-positive erotica. (Mar.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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Reply #5 posted 01/31/06 11:55am

SupaFunkyOrgan
grinderSexy

avatar

lol This is the first I've ever heard of "dandyism"
2010: Healing the Wounds of the Past.... http://prince.org/msg/8/325740
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Reply #6 posted 01/31/06 11:57am

Posthumous

bruce weber is a good person to compare to tom of finland...he crafted a pretty specific physical ideal that became a standard in the gay community for years to follow.

as for tom of finland, if you have a really good library, there's a big book by taschen simply called "tom of finland" - it has tons of biographical information on him, and it has some early work before his pictures had the "look" that we all recognize. that's really the only book i know about, but it's pretty comprehensive...i'm sure there's tons more out there.
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Reply #7 posted 01/31/06 11:57am

Heiress

SupaFunkyOrgangrinderSexy said:

lol This is the first I've ever heard of "dandyism"


ah well, while you're here, could you tell us about your reasons for occaional cross-dressing?

that's another thread of my study... it's a long english tradition, homosexual, bisexual or hetero.
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Reply #8 posted 01/31/06 11:59am

Posthumous

SupaFunkyOrgangrinderSexy said:

lol This is the first I've ever heard of "dandyism"


when i usually think of dandyism, i usually think of quentin crisp, morrissey, and some little purple dude whose name i can't remember right now. wink
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Reply #9 posted 01/31/06 12:12pm

SupaFunkyOrgan
grinderSexy

avatar

Heiress said:

SupaFunkyOrgangrinderSexy said:

lol This is the first I've ever heard of "dandyism"


ah well, while you're here, could you tell us about your reasons for occaional cross-dressing?

that's another thread of my study... it's a long english tradition, homosexual, bisexual or hetero.


http://www.prince.org/msg/105/38606

biggrin
2010: Healing the Wounds of the Past.... http://prince.org/msg/8/325740
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Reply #10 posted 01/31/06 12:24pm

Heiress

Posthumous said:

bruce weber is a good person to compare to tom of finland...he crafted a pretty specific physical ideal that became a standard in the gay community for years to follow.

as for tom of finland, if you have a really good library, there's a big book by taschen simply called "tom of finland" - it has tons of biographical information on him, and it has some early work before his pictures had the "look" that we all recognize. that's really the only book i know about, but it's pretty comprehensive...i'm sure there's tons more out there.


weber's the calvin klein underwear guy, right?

thanks for the leads...
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Reply #11 posted 01/31/06 12:25pm

Heiress

SupaFunkyOrgangrinderSexy said:

Heiress said:



ah well, while you're here, could you tell us about your reasons for occaional cross-dressing?

that's another thread of my study... it's a long english tradition, homosexual, bisexual or hetero.


http://www.prince.org/msg/105/38606

biggrin


thank you so much! this is great.
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Reply #12 posted 01/31/06 12:27pm

Posthumous

Heiress said:

Posthumous said:

bruce weber is a good person to compare to tom of finland...he crafted a pretty specific physical ideal that became a standard in the gay community for years to follow.

as for tom of finland, if you have a really good library, there's a big book by taschen simply called "tom of finland" - it has tons of biographical information on him, and it has some early work before his pictures had the "look" that we all recognize. that's really the only book i know about, but it's pretty comprehensive...i'm sure there's tons more out there.


weber's the calvin klein underwear guy, right?

thanks for the leads...


that's more herb ritts, i think...i'm not a huge fan of either ritts or weber, so i don't know if they were contemporaries at all, or if weber was a mentor figure to ritts, or what. i'm sure someone else would have a much better view on that than me...but they're definitely names to give a good scan, especially weber.
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Reply #13 posted 01/31/06 12:28pm

Heiress

SupaFunkyOrgangrinderSexy said:

Heiress said:



ah well, while you're here, could you tell us about your reasons for occaional cross-dressing?

that's another thread of my study... it's a long english tradition, homosexual, bisexual or hetero.


http://www.prince.org/msg/105/38606

biggrin


I have an inkling that cross-dressing is inherently romantic.

Lord Byron was involved in a bit of that, was he not?
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Reply #14 posted 01/31/06 12:29pm

Heiress

Posthumous said:

Heiress said:



weber's the calvin klein underwear guy, right?

thanks for the leads...


that's more herb ritts, i think...i'm not a huge fan of either ritts or weber, so i don't know if they were contemporaries at all, or if weber was a mentor figure to ritts, or what. i'm sure someone else would have a much better view on that than me...but they're definitely names to give a good scan, especially weber.


did ritts do madonna's book?

maybe i'm getting confused now...confuse
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Reply #15 posted 01/31/06 12:33pm

Posthumous

Heiress said:

Posthumous said:



that's more herb ritts, i think...i'm not a huge fan of either ritts or weber, so i don't know if they were contemporaries at all, or if weber was a mentor figure to ritts, or what. i'm sure someone else would have a much better view on that than me...but they're definitely names to give a good scan, especially weber.


did ritts do madonna's book?


he didn't do the sex book, but he has photographed her. he directed the "cherish" video...he also directed shania twain's "still the one" video, on top of tons of fashion/celeb/ad photography.
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Reply #16 posted 01/31/06 12:35pm

Heiress

Posthumous said:

Heiress said:



did ritts do madonna's book?


he didn't do the sex book, but he has photographed her. he directed the "cherish" video...he also directed shania twain's "still the one" video, on top of tons of fashion/celeb/ad photography.


then maybe it was weber who did it... danged, the two are really so similar, aren't they?
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Reply #17 posted 01/31/06 12:47pm

BananaCologne

Your best bet is to check out (and contact) The Tom of Finland Foundation They do a lot of good work preserving erotic art, and within the Gay leather community at large. Also check out Uli of Berlin who's work is heavily influenced by Tom of Finland and who has also drawn my Master.
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Reply #18 posted 01/31/06 1:01pm

Lammastide

avatar

Heiress, if you don't mind, I'd LOVE to read your work when you're finished. The masculine aesthetic through history and cultures is one of my fascinations.

I'm neither a huge fan of nor expert on Tom of Finland, but Posthumous is correct in that the military boots, the leather, chaps, caps, muscle and body hair, etc. are all a sort of homage via caricature to masculinity, which, in turn, is sort of the totem of the homosexual. (And please don't take that in an idolotrous sense.) Even beyond the Leather Community, you'll find a similar reverence for the hypermasculine look throughout the gay world: cowbows, the "straight" or "daddy" look, the bear, bikers, construction workers, military men, men in formal wear, the "Abercrombie & Fitch" look, the thug, etc. Conversely, there is a certain sector of the gay community that actively reveres a masculine aesthetic exactly opposite of the hypermasculine: the transexual, the transvestite, the twink, the fem, etc. It's all very fascinating!

My guess is that if you dig deep enough, you'll find some of the earliest influences on this dichotomy in classical Western arts, literature and thought. Consider the juxtaposition of Apollo and Dionysus, for example...

Apollo, the Greco-Roman ideal of masculine beauty, was the all-time goldenboy. While classical retellings mention him as a god much younger than the titans, some among his cult passed on that he was THE model after which titan Prometheus patterned the human male: Tall, muscular, chisled, simultaneously a poet, musician and athlete, and the most widely celebrated lover (of both men and women) of all the Olympians. Yet, interestingly, he was the only male Olympian who wasn't a lover of Aphrodite, the goddess of female beauty. Also, while he is rarely depicted angrily or as a warrior or craftsman type, there was scarcely anything "feminine" about him. And visually, he's always on display -- either completely nude or scantily clad in most art and sculpture; his body beautifully muscled and his hair either handsomely coiffed or consciously untamed... and adorned with laurel leaves, the symbol of heroism, dominance and authority. You might say he was THE superlative archetype of the male completely detached from femaleness. Liken this to a Tom of Finland image (albeit sacred, rather than profane).

On the other hand, you have Dionysus, the father of wine, revelry and ecstacy. By some accounts he, too, was bisexual, and the male archetype in opposition to Apollo. He, like Apollo, was supposed to be eternally young and beautiful, but Dionysus was soft, slight, boyish or downright feminine, dressed decidedly in spectacular crowns, purples, reds and wildcat skins... sometimes, it is said, even in women's wigs and clothing! As we discussed briefly once before, his male cult revelers often followed suit. In fact, some are said to have religiously castrated themselves, as did the male followers of the goddess Rhea, Dionysus' mentor. I think he was a personification of the female-in-the-male aesthetic!

I think Dandyism, at least in the West, may have its roots among the ancients who imagined their beloved male dieties like these.

...And by all means, don't forget Oscar Wilde or Plato on male beauty.
twocents
[Edited 1/31/06 20:57pm]
Ὅσον ζῇς φαίνου
μηδὲν ὅλως σὺ λυποῦ
πρὸς ὀλίγον ἐστὶ τὸ ζῆν
τὸ τέλος ὁ χρόνος ἀπαιτεῖ.”
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Reply #19 posted 01/31/06 1:08pm

Lammastide

avatar

Heiress, while I know you aren't big on evolution theory, you might also want to consider that a certain degree of "dandyism" might be a biological thing...

Throughout the animal kingdom, it is often the male, above the female, who is on visual display. Consider their richer colors, their more ornate plumage, their mating dances, etc. Perhaps humans share in a bit of that?
Ὅσον ζῇς φαίνου
μηδὲν ὅλως σὺ λυποῦ
πρὸς ὀλίγον ἐστὶ τὸ ζῆν
τὸ τέλος ὁ χρόνος ἀπαιτεῖ.”
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Reply #20 posted 01/31/06 1:51pm

Posthumous

Heiress said:

Posthumous said:



he didn't do the sex book, but he has photographed her. he directed the "cherish" video...he also directed shania twain's "still the one" video, on top of tons of fashion/celeb/ad photography.


then maybe it was weber who did it... danged, the two are really so similar, aren't they?


nah. steven meisel shot the sex book...his style looks very similar to ritts, but his approach and subject matter usually tend to be slightly more over the top.
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Reply #21 posted 01/31/06 3:02pm

CynthiasSocks

avatar

I'd take a dandy daddy any ol'damned day! batting eyes
Socks still got butt like a leather seat...
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Reply #22 posted 01/31/06 4:52pm

LleeLlee

Posthumous said:

SupaFunkyOrgangrinderSexy said:

lol This is the first I've ever heard of "dandyism"


when i usually think of dandyism, i usually think of quentin crisp, morrissey, and some little purple dude whose name i can't remember right now. wink



me too, also Oscar Wilde in his hey day.
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Reply #23 posted 01/31/06 5:23pm

LleeLlee

Here's a short article about Dandyism and New Romantics.

http://www.wikiservice.at...wRomantics
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Reply #24 posted 01/31/06 6:06pm

Lammastide

avatar

SupaFunkyOrgangrinderSexy said:

Heiress said:



ah well, while you're here, could you tell us about your reasons for occaional cross-dressing?

that's another thread of my study... it's a long english tradition, homosexual, bisexual or hetero.


http://www.prince.org/msg/105/38606

biggrin

I love that post, Supa.
Ὅσον ζῇς φαίνου
μηδὲν ὅλως σὺ λυποῦ
πρὸς ὀλίγον ἐστὶ τὸ ζῆν
τὸ τέλος ὁ χρόνος ἀπαιτεῖ.”
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Reply #25 posted 02/01/06 12:17am

Heiress

BananaCologne said:

Your best bet is to check out (and contact) The Tom of Finland Foundation They do a lot of good work preserving erotic art, and within the Gay leather community at large. Also check out Uli of Berlin who's work is heavily influenced by Tom of Finland and who has also drawn my Master.


Thanks! I've got 'em bookmarked.

Can we see the drawing of your Master? smile
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Reply #26 posted 02/01/06 12:19am

Heiress

Posthumous said:

Heiress said:



then maybe it was weber who did it... danged, the two are really so similar, aren't they?


nah. steven meisel shot the sex book...his style looks very similar to ritts, but his approach and subject matter usually tend to be slightly more over the top.


ya know, i wrote a report about this book. i just can't remember anything for the life of me since the fire... one of those post-traumatic things.

i seem to remember though, that some critics consider meisel a sort of poor-man's ritts...
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Reply #27 posted 02/01/06 12:28am

Heiress

Lammastide said:

Heiress, if you don't mind, I'd LOVE to read your work when you're finished. The masculine aesthetic through history and cultures is one of my fascinations.

I'm neither a huge fan of nor expert on Tom of Finland, but Posthumous is correct in that the military boots, the leather, chaps, caps, muscle and body hair, etc. are all a sort of homage via caricature to masculinity, which, in turn, is sort of the totem of the homosexual. (And please don't take that in an idolotrous sense.) Even beyond the Leather Community, you'll find a similar reverence for the hypermasculine look throughout the gay world: cowbows, the "straight" or "daddy" look, the bear, bikers, construction workers, military men, men in formal wear, the "Abercrombie & Fitch" look, the thug, etc. Conversely, there is a certain sector of the gay community that actively reveres a masculine aesthetic exactly opposite of the hypermasculine: the transexual, the transvestite, the twink, the fem, etc. It's all very fascinating!

My guess is that if you dig deep enough, you'll find some of the earliest influences on this dichotomy in classical Western arts, literature and thought. Consider the juxtaposition of Apollo and Dionysus, for example...

Apollo, the Greco-Roman ideal of masculine beauty, was the all-time goldenboy. While classical retellings mention him as a god much younger than the titans, some among his cult passed on that he was THE model after which titan Prometheus patterned the human male: Tall, muscular, chisled, simultaneously a poet, musician and athlete, and the most widely celebrated lover (of both men and women) of all the Olympians. Yet, interestingly, he was the only male Olympian who wasn't a lover of Aphrodite, the goddess of female beauty. Also, while he is rarely depicted angrily or as a warrior or craftsman type, there was scarcely anything "feminine" about him. And visually, he's always on display -- either completely nude or scantily clad in most art and sculpture; his body beautifully muscled and his hair either handsomely coiffed or consciously untamed... and adorned with laurel leaves, the symbol of heroism, dominance and authority. You might say he was THE superlative archetype of the male completely detached from femaleness. Liken this to a Tom of Finland image (albeit sacred, rather than profane).

On the other hand, you have Dionysus, the father of wine, revelry and ecstacy. By some accounts he, too, was bisexual, and the male archetype in opposition to Apollo. He, like Apollo, was supposed to be eternally young and beautiful, but Dionysus was soft, slight, boyish or downright feminine, dressed decidedly in spectacular crowns, purples, reds and wildcat skins... sometimes, it is said, even in women's wigs and clothing! As we discussed briefly once before, his male cult revelers often followed suit. In fact, some are said to have religiously castrated themselves, as did the male followers of the goddess Rhea, Dionysus' mentor. I think he was a personification of the female-in-the-male aesthetic!

I think Dandyism, at least in the West, may have its roots among the ancients who imagined their beloved male dieties like these.

...And by all means, don't forget Oscar Wilde or Plato on male beauty.
twocents
[Edited 1/31/06 20:57pm]


Shoot, Lammas, I'm writing this thing in French... do you read French? I wouldn't doubt it.

So from a mythical standpoint, was Hephaestus/Vulcan a bear? wink

Dandyism DEFINITELY has its roots in ancient Greece. It was the first true aesthetic cult of masculinity.

Some of the New Romantics like Boy George, Marilyn, etc are just a bit Dionysian, aren't they? Paglia says that male-to-female transvestites are mother - therefore goddess - worshiping.

Yes, this is fascinating, isn't it? I love deciphering these sexual personae.
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Reply #28 posted 02/01/06 12:29am

Heiress

Lammastide said:

Heiress, while I know you aren't big on evolution theory, you might also want to consider that a certain degree of "dandyism" might be a biological thing...

Throughout the animal kingdom, it is often the male, above the female, who is on visual display. Consider their richer colors, their more ornate plumage, their mating dances, etc. Perhaps humans share in a bit of that?


Interesting, though, that these displays are a bit inverted in the case of Romantics and the New Romantics as well... Don't ya think?

Even Prince, I mean... what has he managed to reproduce, really? This is about attention-getting as a way to immortality.
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Reply #29 posted 02/01/06 12:30am

Heiress

CynthiasSocks said:

I'd take a dandy daddy any ol'damned day! batting eyes


I thought I might find you here at some point... wave
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