Mistress Princess

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Published: 09:41 BST, 21 May 2018 | Updated: 12:33 BST, 21 May 2018
A dominatrix allegedly beat up a 'kink party' organiser after telling her 'I'm a mistress and you're just a slave' in a furious argument about using video cameras.
Morgan Gabrielle Cox, aka Mistress Gabrielle, is accused of assaulting Tracie Latham, aka Dragon Princess, at Kink Adelaide in July 2016.
The 46-year-old grabbed her rival in a headlock and hit her 10 times in a heated a dispute, a court heard.  
Mistress Gabrielle (pictured) allegedly beat up a 'kink party' organiser after telling her 'I'm a mistress and you're just a slave' in a furious argument about using video cameras
Morgan Gabrielle Cox, aka Mistress Gabrielle (pictured), is accused of assaulting Tracie Latham, aka Dragon Princess, at Kink Adelaide in July 2016
The argument allegedly started when Ms Latham, who organised the event, told Ms Cox and a member of her entourage known as 'the wolf' that they couldn't film or take pictures inside the venue.
Ms Cox had brought the camera in the hope of recording her group's performance on the closing day of the festival at Queen's Theatre - but Ms Latham said she would call police if it was used. 
Ms Latham said Ms Cox told her: 'You have no right to speak to me, I'm a mistress and you're just a slave' before Ms Latham replied: 'Actually you're right, to my husband I'm a slave but I'm not your slave,' Adelaide Magistrates Court heard. 
Mistress Gabrielle says: 'Lucky devotees and submissives choose me because I'm outgoing'
Ms Latham told the court: 'She said "you're going to be sorry about this" and I said "I'm really not afraid of you" and that's when she lunged toward me, put me in a headlock and hit me more than 10 times.
'She was hitting and punching me without control or thought.' 
Ms Latham said she was left with a black eye and had to get her husband to spank her to cheer her up. 
A lawyer for Ms Cox, who denies one count of assault, outlined a different version of events.
He said his client was moving away from Ms Latham, who allegedly tried to assert her authority and became angry that Ms Cox was ignoring her.  
He said Ms Latham grabbed Ms Cox's cape and pulled it before the pair started slapping each other.  
Ms Latham denied that version of events, saying that would be 'unprofessional,' reported The Advertiser .
She said her and Ms Cox are from opposite ends of the BDSM world, insisting that Ms Cox is professional who enjoys dominating customers but she only enjoys submitting as a 'slave' to her husband. 
Ms Cox had brought the camera in the hope of recording her group's performance on the closing day of the festival at Queen's Theatre (pictured)
Mistress Gabrille has been a dominatrix in Adelaide for more than 10 years.
Her website reads: 'Lucky devotees and submissives choose me because I'm outgoing, intense and extremely passionate about BDSM (especially if it involves My strap-on or torture).
'My pet hates include indecisive people who don't know what they want, liars!... Everyone knows what turns them on! I am so not the Dominatrix you choose in order to find your kinks, I am the Domme who totally wants to exploit them!'
Kink Adelaide is an annual weekend devoted to Fetish education with BDSM workshops and Kink Markets. The trial continues.
Kink Adelaide is an annual weekend devoted to Fetish education with BDSM workshops and Kink Markets. Pictured: Mistress Gabrielle
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Published by Associated Newspapers Ltd
Part of the Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday & Metro Media Group

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♥ When somewhere between friend and lover is.. Daddy & Son
♥ The truth may hurt for a little while, but pretence and lie will hurt the relationship forever.
☑ Don't make decisions without permission
☑ Listen by brains and service mind
S: I'm a fast, hot-tempered, demanding and so very strict woman. Only this type of sub/slave can be with me peacefully. If your personality is not the type of my sub, I don't want to force you be it with unnecessary stress.
R: I already know You are a high Mistress and I already accept Your every rules. I am begging to You to show myself as your real slave, Goddess Mommy
" Thank you for accepting me the way I am. It means a lot that you surrender and live up my standards, dear "
She looks at you like a slave on her knees and begging for forgiveness from the Strict Mistress
Cubura Felix String Bikini MEGAPACK for Jake - Legacy -Enzo - Kario
In strict confidence - Forbidden Fruit
In the garden of delight, angels dreaming bliss
But the sweetest touch of all, is the serpent kiss
And she whispers in your ear, try my fruit of lust
I'm the Queen of ecstasy, in god we cannot trust
Sleep with snakesand you become a victim of the dark
For the mistress of the devil, loves to break a heart
Now its the time to pay the price, painfull is the cost
In the Dawn of innocence, your paradise is lost
Berardo Collection, Centro Cultural de Belem, Belem, Lisbon, Portugal
Spanish expatriate Pablo Picasso was one of the greatest and most influential artists of the 20th century, as well as the co-creator of Cubism.
Born on October 25, 1881, in Málaga, Spain, Pablo Picasso's gargantuan full name, which honors a variety of relatives and saints, is Pablo Diego José Francisco de Paula Juan Nepomuceno María de los Remedios Cipriano de la Santísima Trinidad Martyr Patricio Clito Ruíz y Picasso. Picasso's mother was Doña Maria Picasso y Lopez. His father was Don José Ruiz Blasco, a painter and art teacher. A serious and prematurely world-weary child, the young Picasso possessed a pair of piercing, watchful black eyes that seemed to mark him destined for greatness. "When I was a child, my mother said to me, 'If you become a soldier, you'll be a general. If you become a monk you'll end up as the pope,'" he later recalled. "Instead, I became a painter and wound up as Picasso."
Though he was a relatively poor student, Picasso displayed a prodigious talent for drawing at a very young age. According to legend, his first words were "piz, piz," his childish attempt at saying "lápiz," the Spanish word for pencil. Picasso's father began teaching him to draw and paint when he was a child, and by the time he was 13 years old, his skill level had surpassed his father's. Soon, Picasso lost all desire to do any schoolwork, choosing to spend the school days doodling in his notebook instead. "For being a bad student, I was banished to the 'calaboose,' a bare cell with whitewashed walls and a bench to sit on," he later remembered. "I liked it there, because I took along a sketch pad and drew incessantly ... I could have stayed there forever, drawing without stopping."
In 1895, when Picasso was 14 years old, he moved with his family to Barcelona, Spain. where he quickly applied to the city's prestigious School of Fine Arts. Although the school typically only accepted students several years his senior, Picasso's entrance exam was so extraordinary that he was granted an exception and admitted. Nevertheless, Picasso chafed at the School of Fine Arts' strict rules and formalities, and began skipping class so that he could roam the streets of Barcelona, sketching the city scenes he observed.
In 1897, a 16-year-old Picasso moved to Madrid to attend the Royal Academy of San Fernando. However, he again became frustrated with his school's singular focus on classical subjects and techniques. During this time, he wrote to a friend: "They just go on and on about the same old stuff: Velázquez for painting, Michelangelo for sculpture." Once again, Picasso began skipping class to wander the city and paint what he observed: gypsies, beggars and prostitutes, among other things.
In 1899, Picasso moved back to Barcelona and fell in with a crowd of artists and intellectuals who made their headquarters at a café called El Quatre Gats ("The Four Cats"). Inspired by the anarchists and radicals he met there, Picasso made his decisive break from the classical methods in which he had been trained, and began what would become a lifelong process of experimentation and innovation.
BLUE PERIOD: 'BLUE NUDE,' 'LA VIE' AND OTHER WORKS
At the turn of the 20th century, Pablo Picasso moved to Paris, France—the cultural center of European art—to open his own studio. Art critics and historians typically break Picasso's adult career into distinct periods, the first of which lasted from 1901 to 1904 and is called his "Blue Period," after the color that dominated nearly all of Picasso's paintings over these years. Lonely and deeply depressed over the death of his close friend, Carlos Casagemas, he painted scenes of poverty, isolation and anguish, almost exclusively in shades of blue and green. Picasso's most famous paintings from the Blue Period include "Blue Nude," "La Vie" and "The Old Guitarist," all three of which were completed in 1903.
In contemplation of Picasso and his Blue Period, Symbolist writer and critic Charles Morice once asked, "Is this frighteningly precocious child not fated to bestow the consecration of a masterpiece on the negative sense of living, the illness from which he more than anyone else seems to be suffering?"
ROSE PERIOD: 'GERTRUDE STEIN,' 'TWO NUDES' AND MORE
By 1905, Picasso had largely overcome the depression that had previously debilitated him. Not only was he madly in love with a beautiful model, Fernande Olivier, he was newly prosperous thanks to the generous patronage of art dealer Ambroise Vollard. The artistic manifestation of Picasso's improved spirits was the introduction of warmer colors—including beiges, pinks and reds—in what is known as his "Rose Period" (1904-06). His most famous paintings from these years include "Family at Saltimbanques" (1905), "Gertrude Stein" (1905-06) and "Two Nudes" (1906).
In 1907, Pablo Picasso produced a painting unlike anything he or anyone else had ever painted before, a work that would profoundly influence the direction of art in the 20th century: "Les Demoiselles d'Avignon," a chilling depiction of five nude prostitutes, abstracted and distorted with sharp geometric features and stark blotches of blues, greens and grays. Today, "Les Demoiselles d'Avignon" is considered the precursor and inspiration of Cubism, an artistic style pioneered by Picasso and his friend and fellow painter, Georges Braque.
In Cubist paintings, objects are broken apart and reassembled in an abstracted form, highlighting their composite geometric shapes and depicting them from multiple, simultaneous viewpoints in order to create physics-defying, collage-like effects. At once destructive and creative, Cubism shocked, appalled and fascinated the art world. "It made me feel as if someone was drinking gasoline and spitting fire," Braque said, explaining that he was shocked when he first viewed Picasso's "Les Demoiselles," but quickly became intrigued with Cubism, seeing the new style as a revolutionary movement. French writer and critic Max Jacob, a good friend of both Picasso and painter Juan Gris, called Cubism "the 'Harbinger Comet' of the new century," stating, "Cubism is ... a picture for its own sake. Literary Cubism does the same thing in literature, using reality merely as a means and not as an end."
Picasso's early Cubist paintings, known as his "Analytic Cubist" works, include "Three Women" (1907), "Bread and Fruit Dish on a Table" (1909) and "Girl with Mandolin" (1910). His later Cubist works are distinguished as "Synthetic Cubism" for moving even further away from artistic typicalities of the time, creating vast collages out of a great number of tiny, individual fragments. These paintings include "Still Life with Chair Caning" (1912), "Card Player" (1913-14) and "Three Musicians" (1921).
The outbreak of World War I ushered in the next great change in Picasso's art. He grew more somber and, once again, became preoccupied with the depiction of reality. His works between 1918 and 1927 are categorized as part of his "Classical Period," a brief return to Realism in a career otherwise dominated by experimentation. His most interesting and important works from this period include "Three Women at the Spring" (1921), "Two Women Running on the Beach/The Race" (1922) and "The Pipes of Pan" (1923).
From 1927 onward, Picasso became caught up in a new philosophical and cultural movement known as Surrealism, the artistic manifestation of which was a product of his own Cubism.
Picasso's most well-known Surrealist painting, deemed one of the greatest paintings of all time, was completed in 1937, during the Spanish Civil War. After German bombers supporting Francisco Franco's Nationalist forces carried out a devastating aerial attack on the Basque town of Guernica on April 26, 1937, Picasso, outraged by the bombing and the inhumanity of war, painted "Guernica." Painted in black, white and grays, the work is a Surrealist testament to the horrors of war, and features a minotaur and several human-like figures in various states of anguish and terror. "Guernica" remains one of the most moving and powerful anti-war paintings in history.
'SELF PORTRAIT FACING DEATH' AND OTHER LATER WORKS
In the aftermath of World War II, Picasso became more overtly political. He joined the Communist Party and was twice honored with the International Lenin Peace Prize, first in 1950 and again in 1961. By this point in his life, he was also an international celebrity, the world's most famous living artist. While paparazzi chronicled his every move, however, few paid attention to his art during this time.
In contrast to the dazzling complexity of Synthetic Cubism, Picasso's later paintings display simple, childlike imagery and crude technique. Touching on the artistic validity of these later works, Picasso once remarked upon passing a group of school kids in his old age, "When I was as old as these children, I could draw like Raphael, but it took me a lifetime to learn to draw like them." Picasso created the epitome of his later work, "Self Portrait Facing Death," using pencil and crayon, a year before his death. The autobiographical subject, drawn with crude technique, appears as something between a human and an ape, with a green face and pink hair. Yet the expression in his eyes, capturing a lifetime of wisdom, fear and uncertainty, is the unmistakable work of a master at the height of his powers.
Pablo Picasso continued to create art and maintain an ambitious schedule in his later years, superstitiously believing that work would keep him alive. He died on April 8, 1973, at the age of 91, in Mougins, France. His legacy, however, has long endured.
Inarguably one of the most celebrated and influential painters of the 20th century, Picasso continues to garner reverence for his technical mastery, visionary creativity and profound empathy, and, together, these qualities have distinguished him as a revolutionary artist. Picasso also remains renowned for endlessly reinventing himself, switching between styles so radically different that his life's work seems to be the product of five or six great artists rather than just one.
Of his penchant for style diversity, Picasso insisted that his varied work was not indicative of radical shifts throughout his career, but, rather, of his dedication to objectively evaluating for each piece the form and technique best suited to achieve his desired effect. "Whenever I wanted to say something, I said it the way I believed I should," he explained. "Different themes inevitably require different methods of expression. This does not imply either evolution or progress; it is a matter of following the idea one wants to express and the way in which one wants to express it."
An incorrigible womanizer, Picasso had countless relationships with girlfriends, mistresses, muses and prostitutes during his lifetime, marrying only twice. He wed a ballerina named Olga Khokhlova in 1918, and they remained together for nine years, parting ways in 1927. In 1961, at the age of 69, he married his second wife, Jacqueline Roque.
Between marriages, in 1935, Picasso met Dora Maar, a fellow artist, on the set of Jean Renoir's film Le Crime de Monsieur Lange (released in 1936). The two soon embarked upon a partnership that was both romantic and professional. Their relationship lasted more than a decade, during and after which time Maar struggled with depression; they parted ways in 1946, three years after Picasso began having an affair with a woman named Françoise Gilot.
Picasso fathered four children: Paul, Maya, Claude and Paloma.
“Whenever I wanted to say something, I said it the way I believed I should. Different themes inevitably require different methods of expression. This does not imply either evolution or progress; it is a matter of following the idea one wants to express and the way in which one wants to express it.”
When a 'No' is the most pleasant thing for both.
submitted to the Photo Contest AoP - Café SCHLAGfertig February 2021
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Queen consort of the United Kingdom and the British Dominions; Empress consort of India
SpouseGeorge V of the United Kingdom
Edward VIII of the United Kingdom, later Duke of Windsor
Mary,
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