Will tattoos finally be accepted as art? (2024)

Art

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Will tattoos finally be accepted as art? (1)

By Thomas Hobbs18th August 2022

Possessed of ancient roots, tattoos have in recent years gone from being taboo to part of the social fabric. The next step? Their acceptance as art works that can even outlive their owners, writes Thomas Hobbs.

"When I started out tattoos were seen as something for the outcasts and rebels," says Dr Woo (real name Brian Woo), a prominent LA-based tattoo artist with 1.8 million Instagram followers and a high-profile clientele that includes Justin Bieber, Miley Cyrus and Drake. "I come from a very traditional immigrant Asian family, so my parents weren't too buzzed when their son chose this career path."

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Yet 41-year-old Woo, whose prices begin at $2,500 (£2,066), insists body ink no longer carries the same negative connotations. "I get lawyers, doctors, politicians, kids celebrating their 18th birthdays, grandparents… it's all walks of life coming into my studio," he explains. "There was a time not too long ago where I was the only one in the room with a tattoo, but in 2022 you're looked at funny if you don't have one. Now my parents are okay with this job."

Woo's comments reflect the cultural ubiquity tattoos are currently enjoying. A 2015 YouGov poll suggested one-fifth of British adults had tattoos, while the most recent figures from Ipsos show that 30% of all Americans have at least one on their bodies (a figure that rises to 40% among the under-35s). What once might have been perceived as a subculture more associated with nomadic sailors and biker gangs than the middle classes is now an omnipresent mainstream force and $3bn-a-year industry.

It seems to be a rite of passage for the world's biggest pop stars (Post Malone, Billie Eilish) and athletes (LeBron James, Lionel Messi) to have tattoos etched all over their bodies and faces, inspiring fans to do the same. Major fashion houses utilise famous tattooed celebrities to add an edge to their branding (the heavily tatted comedian Pete Davidson is the current global face of H&M); Virgin Atlantic allows staff to proudly show off their sleeves during long-haul flights; and the US army has relaxed historic rules prohibiting visible tattoos on troops, citing "changing social norms" as a reason.

"It's undeniable how visible tattooing is right now," explains Matt Lodder, a senior lecturer in Art at the University of Essex who specialises in the history of tattoos. "It is a bigger deal culturally than it's ever been."

The urge to communicate stories and desires by tattooing something on our skin has long been a basic human need – Matt Lodder

He continues: "The other day someone sent me an advertising leaflet from the British Post Office, which showed the father of a toddler with a visible full sleeve.There was a time where a relatively conservative organisation like the Post Office doing that would have created a backlash. Now it's accepted as progressive."

However, Lodder insists it's important we frame tattoos as a historic "medium" rather than a "phenomenon", with the media often downplaying the artform's heritage by only narrowing in on the buzz of more recent popularity. To truly understand the trajectory of tattoos, he says we must dig deep into the history. "Western tattooing has been a commodity-based art form for only about 140 years," he explains, suggesting that one of the key drivers behind its commercialisation in the UK was King George V, who got a "desirable" tattoo of a dragon on his arm during a trip to Japan as a teenager in 1881. Conversely, though, he adds, "we also have to remember there's physical evidence of tattooing that dates all the way back to 3250 BC."

Ancient roots

Lodder is referring to Ötzi, a European Tyrolean Iceman whose frozen body was preserved beneath an Alpine glacier along the Austrian-Italian border, before finally being discovered by a perplexed German couple 5,300 years later during their walking holiday in the Alps. Ötzi had 61 tattoos across his body, with the tattoos (which were primarily sets of horizontal and vertical lines) thought to have had a therapeutic purpose akin to acupuncture – since they tended to be clustered around Ötzi's lower back and joints, areas where anthropologists say the Iceman was suffering from degenerative pains and aches.

Other ancient corpses have revealed even more intricate designs. The "Gebelein Man", who has been on display in the British Museum for more than 100 years, has a tattoo of an interlocking sheep and bull on his arm. The naturally mummified corpse dates back to Ancient Egypt's Predynastic period around 5,000 years ago, with the tattoos applied permanently under the skin using a carbon-based substance [experts believe it was likely some type of soot]. There's also evidence that the women of Ancient Egypt had tattoos, with experts speculating that they were carved into the skin so that the gods would protect their babies during pregnancy. The 1891 discovery of Amunet, a priestess of the goddess Hathor at Thebes, showed extensive tattooing across the mummified corpse's abdominal region.

A heavily-tattooed female warrior priestess dubbed the "Princess of Ukok" was discovered by archaeologists in the Altai Mountains – which run through Russia, China, Mongolia and Kazakhstan – back in 1993. The discovery of this 2,500-year-old corpse was particularly significant due to the pristine preservation of the skin and a torso featuring beautifully sophisticated illustrations of mythical beasts, including the antlers of a Capricorn.

Believed to be 25 when she died, the princess was one of the Pazyryks, a Scythian-era tribe that saw body tattoos as a marker of social status, and something that would make it easier for them to be located by loved ones in the afterlife. All these discoveries, in Lodder's view, completely shatter the notion that tattooing is somehow a new "trend" – if anything, it is one of the oldest artforms on record.

Will tattoos finally be accepted as art? (3)

Maud Wagner was one of the first professional female tattoo artists in the US (Credit: Getty Images)

According to Lodder, "the urge to communicate stories and desires by tattooing something on our skin has long been a basic human need". But if tattoos have long been a prized adornment for some, they have also served as a cruel kind of branding. In the ancient Greco-Roman world, tattoos were a mark of punishment and shame, forcibly given to convicts and sex workers. This was a horrific practice that persisted long after the Roman Empire ended, continuing through to America's slave trade and the Holocaust. But despite this, tattoos simultaneously remained an attractive lure for society's elite.

The allure of celebrity

In author Margot Mifflin's brilliant book Bodies of Subversion: A Secret History of Women and Tattoo, she dissects how high society women of the 19th Century in Europe and United States would get tattoos on their feet and upper arms; places easily hidden by clothing. One of the first professional female tattoo artists in the US was Maud Wagner, who learned from her husband, and began work in 1907. Jessie Knight, who started professionally in 1921, was perhaps Wagner's equivalent in the UK.

For Mifflin, tattoos have always carried counter-culture values for women. "Tattooing meant women could do what they wanted with their own bodies," she explains. "It was different for women to men, because tattooed women were directly interfering with nature in a way history had previously forbidden. It was a chance for them to rewrite their bodies."

Mifflin says the "dark shadow" of World War Two – where Jewish prisoners of war were tattooed and numbered by their Nazi capturers during the genocidal murder of the Holocaust – led to a decline in people wanting to get body ink. But by the 1960s, the tide was changing again, something she credits in part to the influence of late rock 'n' roll legend Janis Joplin. "Janis had this Florentine bracelet tattooed on her wrist, which was completely visible, and also a heart above her breast," explains Mifflin.

If you watch someone do a tattoo, and walk away from it thinking it's not art, then you're just a crazy art snob – Mister Cartoon

"She really was this transitional figure who helped tattoos become an alluring mainstream thing. [New York] artist and tattooist Ruth Marten, who blurred the lines between tattoos and the art world, also helped to destroy some of the negative connotations, repositioning tattoos as a rich artform."

The veteran Mister Cartoon (real name Mark Machado) is one of the greatest living tattoo artists in the US. Working his way up from airbrushing lowrider cars and being a prolific graffiti tagger, the 52-year-old ended up tattooing some of pop culture's most important names including Beyoncé, Kobe Bryant, Snoop Dogg, Eminem, Dr Dre and 50 Cent. According to Cartoon, although Joplin was indeed a "transitionary" figure, hip-hop culture really helped solidify tattoos as a desirable practice for the masses.

"In my neighbourhood," the Los Angeles native recalls, "the tattoos you saw were typically done in prison cells. In my mom's head, she saw those heavily tattooed gangsters as the ones who made us Latinos look bad. But to me, they looked like the coolest people in the world."

Will tattoos finally be accepted as art? (4)

Hip-hop artists including Eminem (here seen getting tattooed by Mister Cartoon) helped solidify the mass popularity of tattoos (Credit: Getty Images)

"When inspiring figures like Eminem, 2Pac, and 50 Cent all got tattoos, the public wanted to follow," he continues. "All their tattoos were like mirrors to the pop culture, highlighting social issues and inspiring the underdogs to make something of themselves. If a rapper like Gucci Mane got a tattoo on his face, it showed he was all the way in, and that defiance was infectious."

One of Cartoon's greatest tattoos is the word "Southside", which he tatted across rap artist 50 Cent's back. It is an ode to the rapper's Southside Queens' neighbourhood, and it represents how 50's success meant he was quite literally carrying the hood on his shoulders, and showing anything was possible, even after being shot nine times. Cartoon interprets the Old English lettering aesthetic that he used to see tattooed on LA gang members torsos, and gives it a more grandiose feel by transporting it on to the flesh of a superstar.

"For me it was always about getting the shady type of tattoos from my neighbourhood, which my mom feared were the mark of criminals, and taking them somewhere where they could be seen as luxurious and glamorous," Cartoon explains. "I wanted to really show their value. My mum is now sitting in a house that tattoos paid for, you know? I feel like I succeeded."

Fighting against art world snobbery

Despite this rich history, and tattoos' uniqueness as mobile artworks that walk around with somebody for the whole of their life, Cartoon says he still encounters snobbery. "If you go to art school and say you want to be a tattooist then they still look at it like a dishonest way to make a living," he says.

"We're creating art on moving flesh, which requires so much skill, while serving as therapists and marriage councillors to the people who sit in the chair. If you watch someone do a tattoo, and walk away from it thinking it's not art, then you're just a crazy art snob."

Even if snobbery still exists, Mifflin insists the art and tattoo worlds are converging more and more. She credits Mexican tattooist Dr Lakra (who has pioneered a macabre religion-fuelled visual style) and Belgium's Wim Delvoye (who has controversially tattooed pigs) as two recent figureheads who've helped bridge the gap between tattoos and fine art. Lodder, meanwhile, says Japanese tattooist Gakkin is bringing an "avant-garde" edge to the artform.

At the moment, tattoo artists are selling original artwork based on how long it takes to carve on to someone else's skin – Scott Campbell

The major thing that separates the fine art world from the tattooists is the issue of permanence. When a person dies and their body decomposes, so does their tattoo, meaning the original copy of a tattoo artist's work is lost. By comparison, painters and photographers' work can live on in galleries, bringing these artists posthumous recognition. For tattooists it's much more complicated. Infamously, Dr f*ckushi Masaichi, a Japanese pathologist who was deemed the "Bodysuit collector", carried out a project where he kept consenting people's back skin after they died, preserving their tattoos in Tokyo's Medical Pathology Museum. But this was a complex process and, understandably, not something that caught on.

Yet renowned New York-based tattoo artist Scott Campbell believes technology can finally help to level the playing field. Alongside LA-based creative agency Cthdrl, he has pioneered the new Scab Shop platform, which allows tattoo artists like Woo and Cartoon to sell their tattoos as NFTs (non-fungible tokens) to the general public, meaning their work can live on in the metaverse, and will no longer die with its owner's flesh.

It effectively means that a digital replica of a tattoo design is created, which Scab Shop users then have the chance to bid for in an online auction. The NFT also comes with a tattoo appointment, so the winning bidder can then get the virtual design physically inscribed on to their skin. After sale, all the NFT designs remain archived on the Scab Shop portal. The idea is for Scab Shop to be a digital art gallery that preserves tattooists' work; a Tate Modern for tattooists.

Will tattoos finally be accepted as art? (5)

The new art exhibition Tattoo: Art Under the Skin at CaixaForum in Barcelona is testament to the changing perception of tattooing (Credit: CaixaForum Barcelona)

"At the moment, tattoo artists are selling original artwork based on how long it takes to carve onto someone else's skin," Campbell tells BBC Culture. "It means we're selling the hours of our lives more like plumbers and electricians than artists; we're seen as tradesman who simply carve something on to your arm."

Campbell claims that if Vincent van Gogh was a tattoo artist, no one would know about his work, "because all of his canvases would have died. Worms would have eaten his art". With Scab Shop, he insists the work of tattoo artists can finally achieve permanence beyond a mere photographic copy, which, in turn, should help to eradicate some of the snobbery Mister Cartoon alludes to.

"Thanks to Scab Shop, I can sell my original artwork as images, just like an artist might; it really is the first time tattooing can be truly transacted as a traditional art form," claims Campbell. His hope is this will in turn lead to even more physical exhibitions, like Tattoo: Art Under the Skin, currently running at the CaixaForum in Barcelona, a major historical survey of tattooing from across the world that features, among other things, silicon replicas of body parts on which some of the world's great tattooists have reproduced their designs.

Yet Lodder is sceptical about tattoos being translated into NFTs, in part because it raises tricky issues around copyright. "The guy who tattooed Mike Tyson’s face sued the people who made The Hangover II movie [in which Tyson appeared] for copyright infringement [after they replicated his tattoo on another character]," says Lodder. "I think the issues around who owns a tattoo, the artist or the person in the chair, aren't solved by NFTs, but made more complicated."

If you read a tattoo magazine, it's filled with naked female pin-ups. The culture still seems very biased towards men – Margot Mifflin

Whether Scab Shop proves to be the start of a new era for tattoos or a flash in the pan remains to be seen, but it at least shows tattoo artists are innovating and seeking out new ways to get some of the art world credit that they feel they miss out on.

The gender divide

With the tattoo industry forecast for further growth over the coming three years, Mifflin says ensuring that it's less male-centric should also be seen as a priority. A 2017 poll by Statista claimed women are more likely to have a tattoo than men. Despite this, only 25% of US tattooists are women, vastly outnumbered by their (75%) male counterparts. "If you read a tattoo magazine, it's filled with naked female pin-ups," says Mifflin. "The culture still seems very biased towards men."

One person with experience of this gender imbalance is Sasha Masiuk, a successful female tattooist who made her name in Russia despite being born in Ukraine. Currently based in Los Angeles, she has five tattoo shops globally. "When I started tattooing clients would meet me in person and be weirded out I was a woman," she tells the BBC. "It was like I had to go out of my way to prove to them I was as good as a man."

Yet the fact Masiuk now charges up to $20,000 (£16,534) for her work shows things are changing. She points to shifting attitudes in Russia as proof that tattoo culture isn't just buoyant in the West, but the East too. "When people saw you had tattoos, you were seen as dangerous or a drug addict," she reflects of her early career in Russia. "But now in places like St Petersburg and Moscow, tattoos are accepted as a way of life."

This acceptance is something Masiuk "hopes" will translate into more authoritarian regions of Asia, where tattoos still carry taboo connotations; something illustrated by authorities in Lanzhou, a city in the Gansu province of Northwest China, implementing a tattoo ban for taxi drivers just two years ago on the basis that they "may cause distress to passengers who are women and children".

Will tattoos finally be accepted as art? (6)

A design by Sasha Masiuk, who said she had to deal with sexism when she first entered the industry (Credit: Sasha Masiuk)

It would be dishonest to say that everyone agrees with the late French anthropologist Claude Levi-Strauss's notion that "tattoos transform us from raw animals into cooked cultural beings". In a recent article for The Times, journalist Melanie Phillips wrote that tattoos made her feel "physically sick", and condemned the contemporary normalisation of the culture, something she suggested was evidence of a "crisis" in moral values.

"There will always be gatekeepers who want to separate tattoos from the institutional fine art world," counters tattooist Dr Woo. "Will tattoo designs be hanging in the Whitney Museum 400 years from now? That's left to be said. But history has shown this is an art form that is very resilient."

If tattoo artists are looking to preserve their work for posterity, tattoo-wearers can get rid of their tattoos more easily than ever. In fact, the tattoo removal devices market has been backed to grow by an "incredible" $245m (£203m) by 2029. "Pretty soon we're going to be able to just erase and start over," adds Woo. But what this means for their status as art is another matter.

Even though Woo says the industry is currently a little hom*ogenised with "samey" and "overly simple" Instagram-friendly floral designs, the tattoo titan is convinced his artform will continue to grow globally. He concludes: "Historically, tattoos romanticised the idea of freedom, right? To have one showed you weren't bound by social standards and could be your own person. They were the mark of the revolutionaries.

"So long as human beings want to feel free, tattoos will live on."

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Will tattoos finally be accepted as art? (2024)

FAQs

Will tattoos finally be accepted as art? ›

But as younger generations are getting more tattoos, what was once considered rebellious and unprofessional is now starting to be considered a form of self-expression and art. Today, people get tattoos for a variety of reasons, from symbolic pieces to funky designs that reflect their personal style.

Can tattoos really be classified as art? ›

Like most hotly debated issues, the answer is subjective, and changes depending on who you're talking to. According to Cristian Petru Panaite, assistant curator of exhibitions at the New York Historical Society (NYHS), the answer is simple. If a person intends for their tattoos to be art, then they are.

Are tattoos becoming more accepted? ›

Amid this shift, a large majority of U.S. adults say society has become more accepting of people with tattoos in recent decades, according to a new Pew Research Center survey. And 32% of adults have a tattoo themselves, including 22% who have more than one.

Do you consider tattoos as art? ›

With its traditional and potentially spiritual nature, tattooing easily qualifies as a folk art. However, given the skill and artistry of certain tattooists like Coco, tattooing also is among the fine arts.

Are tattoos declining in popularity? ›

Conclusion. The popularity of tattoos has grown significantly over the past decade, with an estimated 225 million people worldwide having at least one tattoo. In the United States alone, 30% of adults have a tattoo and 40% of those aged 18-29 have at least one.

Why do tattoos have a negative connotation? ›

However, even as tattoos are now recognized as part of mainstream culture, many people are still judgmental towards tattoos due to their negative connotations, associating them with risky behavior, criminality, or gangs.

Why are tattoos frowned upon in certain parts of society? ›

They were first used in ancient cultures as a way to indicate rank or status. They were also used as a means of identification, and to commemorate important events. In the modern era, tattoos began to be seen as taboo. This was largely due to their association with gangs and criminals.

What is the regret rate for tattoos? ›

According to a national survey by Advanced Dermatology in Illinois, tattoo regret builds over time. Six months to a year after getting one, 15% of those asked said they regret getting body art. After two years, that number jumps to 51%.

Do people still think tattoos are unprofessional? ›

Some people may view visible tattoos as unprofessional or inappropriate in a business setting, while others may see tattoos as a form of self-expression that should not impact one's professionalism.

What is the main purpose of tattoos? ›

Today, people choose to be tattooed for artistic, cosmetic, sentimental/memorial, religious, and spiritual reasons, or to symbolize their belonging to or identification with particular groups, including criminal gangs (see criminal tattoos) or a particular ethnic group or law-abiding subculture.

Are tattoos art or taboo? ›

Canvassing opinions among friends of varying ages, the jury is still out as to whether tattoos are types of body art or taboo body mutilation. For many, tattoos indicate a rebellious streak and even a dangerous person. Others relate tattoos with body piercings and find them quite ugly.

Why are tattoos so important? ›

Through time and around the world, the reasons for getting tattoos are numerous and varied. They include religious purposes, for protection or as a source of power, as an indication of group membership, as a status symbol, as an artistic expression, for permanent cosmetics, and as an adjunct to reconstructive surgery.

Why do so many Millennials have tattoos? ›

Tattoos are an outlet for their creativity

38% of Millennials have between 1-6 tattoos, according to a Pew Research survey. Half of those with tattoos have 2-5 and 18% have 6 or more. The trend has been influenced by celebrities and influencers, and TV shows such as Miami Ink.

Will tattoo go out of style? ›

If anything, young people seem more likely than ever to look for a tattoo that links them to a life event and expresses their individuality. The fact that 40-year-olds are still getting their first tattoos, and tattoo popularity is driven by younger demographics, seems to say that they aren't going anywhere.

Are people with tattoos happier? ›

Respondents with four or more tattoos had significantly higher self-esteem than those with less. This was especially among those who reported a history of depression. The cause for this may be that a tattoo gives you a sense of control over the self. And allows you to reclaim something that has been lost or taken.

Do you think that tattooing as a form of art should be promoted why or why not? ›

Yes, tattoos are definitely a form of art even when a ready-made design is used. The fact that a tattooist could use shading or colouring techniques with only a simple ready-made design to make it more appealing is already enough to be considered as an art.

Is tattoo a form of visual art? ›

Tattooing is considered a form of art. It involves the injection of colored inks into the dermis, creating long-lasting designs on the skin . In different cultures, tattooing has been used as a means of body decoration, a symbol of beliefs and rituals, and a form of artistic expression .

Can you be a tattoo artist if you're not artistic? ›

If you dream of becoming a tattoo artist but don't possess natural drawing talent, don't be disheartened. With a genuine passion for this career, you can learn to draw and develop your artistic abilities.

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