
Martin Lui, Siu Din and Grass Mud Horse, 2010
On June, 11 in Hong Kong it will be discussed the journeys of sex in art and pornography.
The debate “TASTE (less): strokes of sex in art and porn, ” which will be held at the premises of the Videotage, is organized by three university professors: Katrien Jacobs, Laikwan Pang, and James Steintrager, from the Department of Cultural and Religious Studies at the University of Hong Kong.
The discussion will focus on the themes of good taste and bad taste in erotic art and pornography. read more & leave a comment
Posted by blogut in Art on 31 May 2011
Tag: art, Cinema, honk kong, pornography, society
The masturbation is the stimulation of the genital organs, or other body parts, in order to obtain erotic gratification that comes to orgasm.
The masturbation, both male and female, is a practice as old as the man whose earliest records date back to 28,000 years ago, dating of a phallic-shaped stone probably used as a dildo.
In ancient civilizations (Egyptians, Greeks), masturbation was considered natural and sacred, and in some cases among the Greeks was tolerated in public.
It was in 1700, because of an anonymous book apparently written by a doctor whose only purpose was to sell some of its products, that masturbation started to being considered harmful to health. read more & leave a comment
Posted by blogut in ABC of Sex on 30 May 2011
Tag: autoeroticism, masturbation, onanism, sex, society
We are on the threshold of the marriage this year. William and Kate, future royals of England, will marry on April 29 2011: how will they spend their wedding night?
Of course, prying paparazzi and journalists will be kept well away from the alcove of the young couple and we will know nothing of their hours of love.
But nothing prevents us to imagine them with the entertaining and provocative Sexy Surprises Love To Love selected for the wedding night.
The two surprise bags, one for him and one for her, include a sex toy, two accessories for spicy games, a product to massage the body, a piece of candy to sweeten the senses, a lubricant and a surprise.
Who knows which are the favorite fantasies of the newlyweds!
You can buy the Sexy Surprises on Black Satin – Erotic Luxury Boutique
Posted by Valentine de Saint-Point in Luxury Toys, Spritz on 28 April 2011
Tag: society, wedding, wedding night, william and kate

Domaine, di Patric Chiha, Francia/Austria 2009
From April 19 to 21 in Rome there is a film festival organized by the Queer in Action association.
“Beyond”is an erotic film festival that focuses on queer themes.
In the selection of the festival the term queer is applied in its most proper and large meaning; in fact, queer in English means “strange “, “unusual” and not simply “homosexual. ”
The exhibition “Beyond” in this sense tells and explores stories of a contemporary humanity that furiously researches its identity by passing through sensual and erotic tension.
The protagonists of the screened films are creatures in search of themselves and of human warmth, as in “J’ai reve sous l’eau” (France/USA, 2008). In the chaos of relationships the only thing that appears clear is that nobody knows what the object of desire is, and everyone is motivated by strong drives without a clear goal.
Characters that intertwine and destroy loving relationships, eros and thanatos drawing chaotic lives that only in some cases finish with the simple truth of the encounter with the other (and therefore with oneself) as in “Plan B” (Argentina, 2009).
Each film is about real and possible stories, fragments of queer life that belong to everyone as inhabitants of an era and a world.
Posted by Valentine de Saint-Point in Cinema on 18 April 2011
Tag: Cinema, eroticism, homosexuality, queer, sex, society
Voyeurism, although classified among paraphilias, ie the pathological forms of sexuality, is in fact a mere natural impulse of human desire.
We are equipped with five senses and we want to satisfy them all, taste, smell, touch, not to mention the view.
Thus, voyeurism consists in getting sexual satisfaction simply by looking at people who commit erotic acts, or get naked. Often in the fantasy of the voyeur these people don’t need to know they are looked at, but it also happens that between couples and singles are organized events for erotic games of voyeurism involving role-playing.
It’s probably happened to you, discovering to have been spied on while indulging in intimate caresses with your partner in a secluded place. The feeling is usually one of annoyance and disturbance. But this is not always the case. Some people like to be spied on and so one can say that for every voyeur there is an exhibitionist.
The beauty of the Internet and modern forms of communication is also to be able to organize “blind” meetings of voyeurism.
If you like being watched or looked at through the Internet, you can contact and invite your favorite voyeur in the place where your rendezvous with the love partner will happen.
We live in a world of infinite possibilities, we just need how to use them.
Posted by Valentine de Saint-Point in ABC of Sex on 17 April 2011
Tag: couple, internet, sex, society, voyeur, voyeurism

Gang Bang. Abierto hasta la hora del Ángelus di Josep Maria Miró
Gang Bang. Open Until the Hour of the Angelus is a provocative and engaging play that, starting from extreme situations, aims to investigate the contemporary world and the crumbling of values that characterize human relationships.
Sex, Drugs and Catholicism are the ingredients of this strong performance that, like in an explosive cocktail, did not fail to arouse the outrage of Christian associations.
The show, scheduled from March 24 to April 17, 2011 at the National Theatre of Catalunya in Barcelona, on March 31 has even suffered a break but this did not stop the actors to complete the show.
The controversial plot sees, at the eve of the Pope’s visit to Barcelona, a catechist addict nun and a young eighteen year old boy who offers his body to anyone, meet with other characters in a gay club where anything will happen.
The director Josep Maria Miró explained that his intention is not to insult the Catholic religion, but to have the opportunity to explore a world relationships with changing and still unknown values.
Posted by Valentine de Saint-Point in Theatre on 9 April 2011
Tag: barcelona, drugs, homosexuality, religion, sex, society, Theatre

Festa del Kanamara Matsuri, Kawasaki, Giappone
Close to Easter, when nature is reborn, the cherry trees bloom and dormant desires awaken, in Japan, in the city of Kawasaki, a very special occasion is celebrated.
The celebration of the “Kanamara Matsuri“, which is the veneration of a huge phallus carried in procession through the streets of the city.
The tradition dates back to the Edo period (1603-1867). It is said that a girl was possessed by a demon and bit every man who had sex with her; then a blacksmith built an enormous phallus of iron with which he penetrated her driving out of her the demon forever.
As it is customary in the Shinto religion, which creates divinities in memory of events or personalities, a temple was built to commemorate the achievement.
The temple dedicated to the huge phallus was in the past the destination of the pilgrimage of young prostitutes who invoked its protection to increase their profits and avoid venereal diseases like syphilis. Even today, in the temple are collected prayers for the conception of children and to ward off AIDS.
So the local community, healthy and prolific, every year loves to thank the protector cock with a joyful and colorful celebration where the traditional Japanese sense of modesty is reversed in a carnival celebration.
Posted by Valentine de Saint-Point in Events, Fairs, Exhibitions and Festivals on 6 April 2011
Tag: fair, Japan, penis, phallus, society, traditions

CorpusTRIP di Luca Donnini
On April 1, 2011 it begins the trip of the body.
The photographer Luca Donnini carries on a big van his collection “Corpus“: black and white photographs depicting dozens of naked bodies photographed between 2007 and 2010 in the major European capitals and beyond.
Luca Donnini, accompanied by his project manager and musician Adi Chiru, by filmmaker Alessio Maximilian Schroder and by testimonial and supporter Lola Kola, goes on a trip around Europe to to show off his carnal visions, his collection of bodies that become a story.
read more & leave a comment
Posted by Valentine de Saint-Point in Art on 1 April 2011
Tag: body, installation, society, travel
Virginity is the first totem of human sexuality. It is usually regarded as something to be preserved for females and to be overcome as soon as possible for males.
Virginity commonly means the condition of the woman or man who has never had a full vaginal intercourse.
In fact, it’s quite a common practice to engage in oral or anal intercourse to preserve the vaginal virginity.
Of course the reasons are strictly reproductive: the male, tribally speaking, needs to know that the female is spotless regarding his possible paternity.
The concept of preservation of virginity is thus linked to the need for order and social control of patriarchal nature.
In the contemporary world, although there are broad cultural groups for whom virginity is still a value to be protected until marriage, it is increasingly bought and sold.
Some women preserve it to sell to the highest bidder, as indeed the geisha did in ancient Japan, while other women make it a tool to promote their business.
An example is the recent case of the fetish model Nicki Blue, who has decided to lose her virginity during a reality show to get thousands of views on her site.
Beyond how it is practiced and lived, the loss of virginity is also always a major rite of passage from childhood to adulthood, marking the moment when we become capable of procreation and parenthood.
In the end it’s not necessarily a happy moment, and it carries atavistic elements like fear, blood, pain. Therefore it is desirable o make it happen in a relationship of trust by not preserve a memory like the one that Daniele Luttazzi has:
“I remember with anguish the first time I made love. It was night, it was dark, I was alone.”
Posted by Valentine de Saint-Point in ABC of Sex on 11 February 2011
Tag: culture, reproduction, sex, society, virginity