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LGBT LGBT Edited by Brittany Martin timeout.com/los-angeles/lgbt @britt_m


Leather legacy


The Echo Park home of erotic illustrator Tom of Finland has been recognized as a landmark of the city’s LGBT history. By Brittany Martin


THE CRAFTSMAN-STYLE bungalow in Echo Park where artist Touko Laaksonen, better known as Tom of Finland, once lived might look conventional from outside, but inside you’ll find a monument to an unconventional life, a treasure trove of relics of L.A.’s gay history—and lots and lots of leather. Recently, as part of a campaign to recognize and preserve LGBT history across Los Angeles, the house has been granted official historical-cultural landmark status by the city. Laaksonen began his career as a gay-


erotica illustrator in the 1950s in Helsinki, Finland. At the time, U.S. law forbade the sale of anything depicting “overt homosexual acts,” so he created images of muscle-bound, leather-clad cops and bikers for American fitness magazines, and the works left just enough to the imagination. After a 1962 Supreme Court ruling struck down those censorship laws, Laaksonen was free to be as explicit as he wished. In the 1970s, Laaksonen moved to Los


Angeles and took up residence in an East side bungalow, where he lived and worked for what would be his most productive years and until his death in 1991. The home became an important clubhouse of sorts for the local gay community, often welcoming guests such as Robert Mapplethorpe and John Waters.


Time Out Los Angeles January–March 2017


Durk Dehner, Laaksonen’s business


partner and friend, still owns the house, which is now the base of operations for the Tom of Finland Foundation. The foundation hosts occasional events, art classes and the annual Tom of Finland Art and Culture Festival; it also serves as an archive of the artist’s work and holds what is believed to be the world’s largest collection of gay erotic art. The foundation led the effort to recognize


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the house as a landmark to honor the significance of Laaksonen’s work, as well as the role the house played as a hotbed of gay activism, organizing and social life. Landmark designation gives the home the legitimacy of official status and ensures the building will be preserved, even if the foundation ceases to be based there. “We look at Tom of Finland House as an example of a stepping-stone to how we got to where we are today,” says Adrian Scott Fine, director of advocacy for the Los Angeles Conservancy, which supported the landmark application. “These places help us chart the course of LGBTQ history, and, right now, that project seems more timely and relevant than ever.” à 1421 Laveta Terr (213-250-1685, tomoffinland foundation.org)


PHOTOGRAPHS: COURTESY TOM OF FINLAND HOUSE FOUNDATION/TOM HOUSE/MARTYN THOMPSON


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