Category Archives: blogs

Belgian bloggers #1

Rafaela
Rafaela by carmendevos

I met Rafaela in January 2005. That was before she became SensOtheque. She blogged as Bitterzoet [1], a very personal blog about here sexual encounters, fantasies, likes and dislikes. It featured some of the best writing in the Belgian blogosphere at that moment.Since then, Rafaela has become a name in the world of Belgian erotomania, she launched SensOtheque; a website dedicated to eroticism, was featured in Feeling and De Morgen, and contributed to the most recent issue of TicKL Magazine [2] [3], a Belgian magazine launched by carmendevos [4].

I remember quite clearly what I liked about Rafaela. She managed to physically visualize a space hitherto primarily mental. She fleshed out this pornotopia as Le Château d’O[5].

“The Château d’O features erotically decorated bedrooms with luxury bathrooms, but also houses common lounge spaces with a cinematheque, a print cabinet, a sens’Othèque where one can use sex toys, a well-furnished library and a atmospheric bar and restaurant, a bathhouse with sauna and a BDSM attic.” [6]

Later, after she’d launched the SensOtheque “a guide to refined Literotica, Cinerotica & Bedroom Arts” [7], she incorporated these early comments into her mission statement.

“The sensOtheque is a dream that comes true, an empire of kinky chic, with an air of boudoir romanticism, of the voluptuous and the sumptuous. The sensOtheque represents a passion for far-off, more glorious days: the times of the courtesans and the distinguished geishas, the red velvet atmosphere of The Story of O and Venus in Furs, the decadent world of the 18th century Salons, where women were educated in the field of sexual pleasure.”

TicKL 2 can be ordered here. It includes the only and very short piece of fiction I have ever written, called “Brahms II“, version homme, inspired by Brahms I, by Rafaela.

This post is the first of a new series on blogs from Belgium

Elsewhere #7

  1. A Funny Thing Happened on His Way to the Movies « OMBRES BLANCHES

    Did Dulac betray Artaud’s intentions?
  2. Morbid Anatomy: Wonderful Depiction of a Popular Anatomical Museum, 1913

    “A. Friedländer, Plakat für ein anatomisches Museum, Hamburg, 1913”

  3. documents: Mauss / Bataille (part 1)

    There is a strong thematic unity between the teachings of the great French ethnologist Marcel Mauss and the work of the so-called ‘philosopher of evil’, Georges Bataille: sacrifice, the sacred, power, shamanism, secret societies are themes that were taken up by Mauss and figured largely in Bataille’s oeuvre.

  4. Cimetières dans la falaise [Cemeteries in the cliffs] « >dmtls Merzbau

    documentary by Jean Rouch on the Dogon [in Mali], shot during a 1950-1951 expedition with Marcel Griaul. Witness sacred death and burial rituals

  5. Propaganda Postcards of the Great War – Alberto Martini (1)

    Introducing Alberto Martini’s horrific cartoons
  6. DC’s: The day my blog becomes a movie projector, screen, a bunch of folding chairs, and a storefront in a bad part of town in honor of Bruce Conner

    Dennis Cooper on Bruce Connor

  7. The art of Jean-Paul Faccon

    Another European artist who enjoys invented and ruined architecture.

Farewell Woebot (2003 -2008)

RIP Woebot (2003 – 2008) [1].

Sad, after Giornale Nuovo quit last year, musical blog Woebot decided to do the same. He will be sorely missed. If you are new to his writing just check his penultimate entry on jazz.

Questions have been raised (by John Coulthart amongst others, though I can’t find his post) on what will happen to the archives of the writing of these wonderful blogs. Other than books, which are disseminated, web content is stored in a centralized fashion. If a source disappears,  it’s usually gone forever. Services such as the Wayback machine may help. Check the archives for Woebot there.

Esotika’s exotica

Mike from Esotika introduces himself

I’m currently an undergraduate student in the process of getting my BFA in Photography at Northern Illinois University. … I’m 21 years old and only have a few semesters left before I’ll be applying to graduate schools.

Il Giornale Nuovo quits after five years

Luigi Serafini’s book Pulcinellopedia Piccola

From Luigi Serafini s book Pulcinellopedia Piccola

Il Giornale Nuovo (2002 – 2007) was a visual arts blog. Its author wrote in praise of miscellaneity:

“I WRITE in praise of miscellaneity, and in particular of assortment and variousness in books; of motley volumes; of mixed-up, impure works which nevertheless accord with the mess & disorder of nature, of life.”

From its first post, to its last, a very inspired work. It will be sorely missed.

I’m sure he will be back.

Elsewhere #5

Surreal documents has three clips by Antonio Margheriti and three by Jesus Franco.

Musically, there is { feuilleton } with an extended profile on Street Sounds Electro and lots of audio via Youtube, praising the music just as much as the sleeve design. Also electro-ish is DJ Martian’s posting of Pink Industry’s What I Wouldn’t Give.

Giornale Nuovo reports on Érik Desmazières. I need to do more with ouvrage, a French adult comics history checklist. Lovely seated female nude by Prudhon.

*A Clockwork monk (automaton)

*Morbid Anatomy: Saul Chernick, 21st Century

*Dutch language dissertation on Unica Zürn(PDF).

Elsewhere #4

The photographs of Jana Hojstricová depict a woman dressed up in tight and transparent clothes made from foil. via MOON RIVER, a newly discovered blog, which I should’ve found a long time ago. Fabulous. More on the photographic front is the city photography of Eugene de Salignac, a beautiful photograph of a girl undressing at the beach, the fetish photography of China Hamilton. Then there is a very special 18th-century coffee service, a new blog I’d like to present: gimcrack hospital (PG) (Gimcrack represents what I like best about blogs, succeeding in making a fictional place, in this case, a mental institution where Nurse Myra works). I have a Youtube clip from an old skool house music classic. L’Alamblog presents BIZARRE (nouvelle série, n° 31, 3e trimestre 1963). Censorshipwise there is a perfect illustration to forbidden libraries, a piece on German censorship in the 20th century. The always associative Quick Study on (un)satisfaction and Dennis Cooper gives you the funk.