I don’t normally post Sardax artwork. Not because I don’t love it, he’s without doubt my favorite femdom artist, but because he earns a living via his paysite. It’s one thing to share a single photograph from a commercial site. They typically make money from videos and any one scene will have dozens of photographs clicked off. It’s quite another to freely share a single piece of artwork that the artist spent hours slaving over.
The Sardax images below are a little different. They were done in collaboration with Afira, a British based contemporary women’s clothing brand. As the designer herself explains in an interview…
I have known and admired Sardax’s work for a long time. Then one evening I found myself sitting next to him at a dinner party! We hit it off immediately, became friends and creative collaboration soon followed.
….
I hope my customers will see images of women experimenting with, enjoying and flaunting their sexual power. I can only imagine Sardax’s fans will see the same, but perhaps from the very particular perspective of men who adore that power in women.
My first thought was: Why don’t I get invited to those kind of dinner parties? My typical dinner party experience is someone explaining how new types of switch routers will change the design of data center network fabrics. I need less geeks and more femdom illustrators to split a bottle of Cabernet with. My second thought was around how brilliant it was to see this kind of crossover. It’s not a freakshow collaboration. The kind where a mainstream brand gets some free publicity by doing some ‘shocking’ S&M images and briefly flirting with controversy. Instead it seems to be the case where artists in two different but related fields saw a chance to work together. The end result is some great art and a message of normality* and acceptance for femdom. That can only be a good thing.
You can see the rest of the images at the Afira site under the Dark Daze collection.
* OK, so the images don’t depict anything close to normal. But neither does a lot of advertising. I mean that it’s normal in the same sense that a brand might choose a sports star or a music start to cast a positive light on their products. It’s halo style advertising, which is very unusual in a BDSM context.
Hi Paltego:
Like yourself I consider Sardax to be the greatest contemporary femdom artist. Sharing his work is a double edged sword for sure. In fact I have shared so much of it on my blog that I found I have had to cut down down quite a bit. As always I include links to the site of origin and give him credit. I hope that I have helped gain him new admirers and memberships to his site. But if I give away everything for free after awhile there comes a point of diminishing returns for the artist. Sardax and I have spoken. He has been very gracious about my displaying his work. But still…
Thanks for sharing these. I thinks its very positive that Sardax is finding patrons beyond the narrow world of femdom erotica.
Hey hmp,
I’ve debated posting some of his older stuff that has been around for years and reposted on many tumblrs. It seems like that wouldn’t hurt. But then it becomes a question of where to draw the line. As you say, you found you had to cut down to get an appropriate balance. It just seems easiest for me to keep it simple and not post it at all (unless it’s stuff he made public). On the other hand, who knows how many people have gone to his site and got subscriptions thanks to your links.
Glad you liked these shots.
-paltego
Sardax is indeed a splendid and imaginative genius af an artist, as well as a deeply sensitive person.
However, for sheer Femdom fantasy and fierceness and over-the-top unforgettable imagery, Nanshakh ranks Number One, if just by a RCH,* in the field. His storyline of the beautiful Mistresses of the planet Sleeek is, literally, out of this world.
* For any readers who may no know this universal measurement unit, RCH stands for Red Cunt Hair, the smallest and most beautiful unit of measurement unit on anyone’s yardstick.