Author Archives: slide

Brighton Fetish Weekend

Brighton Fetish Weekend is nearly upon us. Here are just a few of the events, via Facebook:

“…1) The weekend kicks off Friday night with a delicious KINKY COCKTAILS party for you to meet and mingle with the team of performers, models, teachers, volunteers, and of course the main organisers.
PLEASE SEE https://www.facebook.com/events/268795733266714/ (and PLEASE REGISTER to help us judge numbers).

2) Saturday afternoon brings you more mayhem with a FEAST OF THE SENSES, where you can enjoy a variety of BDSM demonstrations & workshops, kinky art displays, erotic literature classes, a burlesque/fetish show from the gorgeous Lottie Kixx… plus much more.
PLEASE SEE https://www.facebook.com/events/564008156984190/?fref=ts

3) The official CLUB SPANK BALL takes place on the Saturday night, with another show for your pervy pleasure by the lovely Lottie, and added kinky goodness in the form of fetish visuals and our stage dancers ‘Privates on Parade’.
PLEASE SEE https://www.facebook.com/events/431456893616008/.

4) Sunday brings all the fun of the fair, with a very special TWISTED MARKET in the afternoon, followed by the new TWISTED FASHION SHOW at 7pm, featuring talented local designers… then the Market Afterparty on the Sunday evening.
PLEASE SEE https://www.facebook.com/events/100499413494125/…”

Full details, with tickets and links here.

brightonfetish

Lube Wrestling Party

So this week, at a friend’s birthday party, was an enormous inflatable pool of lubricant. There was also wrestling. Here are some blurry photos (taken and published with permission) of what happened. Click thumbnails to enlarge.

But is it Art?

Here’s a chunk of a New Statesman article by Tabatha Leggett on whether porn can ever be art (especially prescient for me, as I’ve just started drawing smut again after a long break):

“…Feminist philosopher Anne Eaton, who writes about this subject often, thinks that expressing a morally dubious message undermines the value of a work of art because it requires its viewers to identify with ethical deformities, which distracts them from appreciating the works as art. Put simply, she reckons that to enjoy porn, you have to (at least temporarily) objectify women, and you can’t do this at the same time as contemplating it as art.

Eaton’s arguments are tendentious. Obviously pornography doesn’t always require viewers to objectify women. That’s simply an accurate, if not particularly astute, observation about the majority of the stuff you’ll find on any teenage boy’s laptop. But she’s wrong to think that you can’t objectify someone in a work of art and contemplate its artistic value at the same time. There are loads of artworks that let you do that. Remember Fiona Banner’s 2002 Turner Prize nominee “Arsewoman in Wonderland”, a pornographic film transcript printed in pink ink on a large canvas? It says things like, “he cums in her face, she moans and rolls over”. You can objectify the woman being described and think about whether it’s art at the same time.

The same goes for basically everything that Jeff Koons ever made. Koons even spoke about the function of the explicit paintings from his 1989 exhibition “Made in Heaven” being twofold: to encourage audiences to form opinions about acceptable expression of sexuality and to get them feeling a little hot under the collar…”

Full article here.