Subvert the patriarchy11/30/2022 ![]() Would you describe your work as different from that? Natasha Stagg: The Guardian article groups you with women who are mostly doing sex-positive art projects connected to self-discovery and female pleasure zones. After a recent piece published in The Guardian on “the pleasure revolution” profiled her, the incendiary news site The Daily Mail lifted parts of the text and published an image-laden article called “Political dominatrix who uses mind games to humiliate her submissives reveals how she focuses her unique skills on white, right-wing men in order to turn them into socialists.” She has been featured in periodicals as a contributing editor, a designer’s muse, and a subject whose thoughts on socialism and gender equality have sparked controversy. ![]() She is incredibly open, admitting to finding her way through so many fields accidentally as she becomes interested in new ideas. Reba works as a dominatrix in London, but besides that, her credentials are intimidating, especially for someone in her twenties: She’s an author, a gallery-represented artist, the founder of a small press called Wet Satin, a radio show founder and host, a teacher at Central Saint Martins’ graduate program, and the list continues. ![]() ![]() When I met Reba Maybury at a friend’s house in Glasgow, I was transfixed for hours, first by her Gaultier collection, and next by her insightful articulation of the male ego as discovered by way of masochistic rituals. ![]()
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