Patrick Fillion May 2026
Unable to find representation for his own desires, Fillion began drawing his own characters. By the late 1990s, he had honed a style that fused the bombastic energy of American superhero comics with the explicit honesty of French-Belgian erotic art. His lines were thick and confident; his anatomy was impossibly sculpted (massive pecs, tree-trunk thighs, wasp waists); and his characters were always, unequivocally, gay. The most significant milestone in Patrick Fillion’s career was the founding of Class Comics (originally Class Enterprises). In an era before social media and crowdfunding, Fillion took the risky step of self-publishing. He understood that mainstream publishers like DC or Marvel would never allow Captain America to perform a sex act on his partner, nor would they allow Wolverine to have a boyfriend.
Patrick Fillion is not just an erotic artist; he is a world-builder, a historian of queer visual culture, and a pioneer of independent publishing. As long as there are men who love men, and as long as there is a desire to see justice served in a muscle-bearing uniform, the legend of Patrick Fillion will endure. Patrick Fillion
Disclaimer: The work of Patrick Fillion is intended for adult readers (18+) and features explicit sexual content, as well as mature themes. Unable to find representation for his own desires,
In the sprawling universe of comic book artistry, names like Jack Kirby, Neal Adams, and Todd McFarlane are heralded for revolutionizing the mainstream superhero genre. But in the realm of LGBTQ+ comics—specifically the sub-genre of gay erotic art and muscle fantasy—one name stands as a titan among men: Patrick Fillion . The most significant milestone in Patrick Fillion’s career