Steam Clean was created by Canadian artist Laura Ķeniņš about a women's sauna party set in probably Finland or Latvia. All of the women seem to be queer, but they spend a lot of time talking about their experiences with men--early uncomfortable dating experiences, men at work who touch them, try to overpower them in various ways. Some of the women are there to meet women; one is trans-masculine and wonders whether she should be there since she has now had top surgery and doesn't identify as female.
It's really just a kind of talk fest, involving a range of political/personal perspectives, raising important issues about patriarchy, orientation, and related issues, but then in walks Laima, who announces herself as the goddess of fate, women and saunas. I had to look up the Baltic Goddess Laima, who is actually seen as the goddess of fates, and supposedly helps arrange marriages, oversees weddings, protects pregnant women, and so on. A women's goddess, yep, associated historically with "traditional cultural values," but not (historically) an all-inclusive one, certainly not a queer one. She talks with some of the women, who lightly question her why, if she is a women's goddess, she can't be a goddess for a wider group of women?!
Pastel, colored pencil work, very inviting and slice of life; that is, until the goddess comes in! Retrofit production, nicely done!