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Tag: art

Chef Tattoos

by on Jun.11, 2010, under Needles and Sins Blog

Seamus-Mullen-Boqueria-Courtesy-Food-Network.jpg
It’s not hard to mistake Top Chef with LA Ink, considering both shows are heavy on the tattoos and cheese. It almost seems like high-end NY eateries require full sleeves for a souffle.

Taking a look at the art of chef tattoos is Zagat’s Tattoo Tell-All series.

Aside from the use of “tats” and my usual pet peeve of not naming the tattoo artists behind the work, it’s a good read–particularly the “Ink Insight” section addressing the why question.

Here are some quotes to give you a taste:

“There are a lot of tattooed punk-rock kids in the kitchen because it
has punk-rock energy. If you’re a banker giving out million-dollar
loans, you can’t have a tattoo on your hand, but it’s funny that someone
tattooed, like Nate Appleman, might have a great
career, but some people wouldn’t want to sit next to him on the subway.”
– Jamie Bissonnette, Coppa
and Toro

“Maybe chefs like tats because we are always burning our arms? I’ve
never gotten one to cover a burn but I’ve gotten burned on top of my
tattoos. Gives it a three-dimensional look.”
– Seamus Mullen, Boqueria
[shown right]

“I consider tattoos [to be] art like cooking is an art. My tattoos don’t
scream, ‘look at me, I’m a chef!’ I just like to create little things
that send little messages about who I am as a person. I do the same
thing when I cook.”
– Michael Voltaggio, Langham
Huntington Dining Room

Read more on the Zagat Blog.

UPDATE: LA Weekly also has an extensive article on chef tattoos with a juicy slideshow, including the one below by Amy Scattergood of Carolynn Spence, Chateau Marmont.

chefs-with-tattoos.4912982.87.jpgThanks, Kir Bostic, for the link!

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Sponsored Post: Eikon Device Tattoo Supplies

by on Jun.10, 2010, under Needles and Sins Blog

Eikon Logo.PNGThe following is a post sponsored by Eikon Device, providers of Tattoo Supplies.

Eikon Device is a leading manufacturer and online distributor of tattoo supplies and equipment. Initially formed in 1994 to research and develop tattoo needles, Eikon Device expanded its scope in 1997 to focus on the technical aspects of tattooing. This change
marked the beginning of many published papers as well as two tattoo inventions: the Eikon Meter and Tru-Spring armature bars.

The success of Eikon Device is largely due to its foundation in science and research. Their continuous focus on tattooing techniques, safety issues and product quality helps tattoo artists make better choices about products and practices.

Eikon Device offers a full catalog of tattoo supplies and equipment:

* Tattoo machines, from FK Irons to Neuma machines and supplies;
* Tattoo ink in five great choices for color:

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Conventions & Art Show Schedule

by on Jun.08, 2010, under Needles and Sins Blog, Tattoo News

ink-n-iron photo by nicole reed.jpgInk-n-Iron Fest photo by Nicole Reed

Tattoo events are taking place every thirty seconds throughout the summer, from New Jersey to Taiwan. Here’s our pick list for the next few months to get you planning your own tattoo tour.

June

This weekend, June 11-13th, at the Ink-n-Iron show, custom cars, pin-up girls, Rockabilly bands, and top tattooists converge around and aboard the Queen Mary in Long Beach, CA. I’ve been following the road trips of artists and vendors on Twitter as they make their way over for the seventh year of this sleep-less event.

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I Spied Your Red Heart (Tattoo Mine?)

by on Jun.07, 2010, under New York Times

Poetry of body art as spied on craigslist.

Read more: I Spied Your Red Heart (Tattoo Mine?)

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World Record: Most Tattooed Woman

by on Jun.01, 2010, under Needles and Sins Blog

most tattooed woman.jpg

I was gonna save this for the monster news review I’ll have up Friday but y’all keep sending me links to the articles, so hell, I might as well put it up now:

Meet the Guinness World Record-holder for the Most Tattooed Woman: Julia Gnuse.

The press has been loving her the past few days because she was in NYC for Book Expo America promoting the Guinness World Records 2011 annual and Gamer’s editions — and she was clearly a colorful attraction. But she also has a particularly interesting story.

As Julia says in this video interview with the BBC, she found tattooing as a way to cope with a skin disorder called Porphyria, which can cause blisters or scarring. Twenty years later, and with 95% of her body covered in various motifs including cartoons and celebrity portraits, the 55-year-old has won her place among Lucky Diamond Rich (Most Tattooed Person) and Isobel Varley (Most Senior Tattooed Woman) in Guinness’s Body Beautiful category.

Julia’s tattoos are mostly done by Art Godoy of Fun House Tattooing, and have cost her about $70,000, according to AOL News.

To see more of her art, check the photo set on Mirror News and in this Reuters video below.

See the rest here: World Record: Most Tattooed Woman

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First Amendment & Tattoos

by on May.25, 2010, under Needles and Sins Blog

yer cheatin heart.jpgPhoto of Johnny Anderson by Allen J. Schaben for Los
Angeles Times

In 2006, Johnny Anderson of Yer Cheat’n Heart Tattoo wanted to move his shop to a better location and decided on Hermosa Beach, CA; however, he was denied because zoning laws prohibited tattooing in the city (not as an outright ban but by not recognizing it as a permissible use). Johnny fought back, suing in federal court in LA claiming that his First Amendment rights were violated and that tattooing is protected artistic expression.

He lost that case because the court found that tattooing was a service and “‘not sufficiently imbued with elements
of communication” to be protected as speech.

But Johnny didn’t give up. He appealed to the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, which recently heard the case, and as the Los
Angeles Times
reports
, “some constitutional law scholars predict the outcome could be different
in what would be the first–and potentially precedent-setting–federal
appellate decision on whether the tattoo artist is engaged in 1st
Amendment-protected activity when designing and applying custom tattoos.”

This means that if Johnny wins, similar oppressive zoning laws–which are some of the biggest obstacles tattooists must overcome in opening up shop across the US–could be challenged with greater success; even better, local officials may think twice before drafting/amending laws to keep tattoo shops out of their districts.

Other tattooists have challenged tattoo bans on other grounds and have won, but in my opinion, this constitutional question is the most interesting and far reaching in its implications:


Does the First Amendment right to free expression protect tattooing?

Here’s what one scholar said to the LA Times:

“If it’s art, it’s art, and art gets protection,” UC Berkeley law professor and 1st Amendment expert Jesse Choper said of the debate over whether tattoos are protected speech. Hermosa Beach might have a chance of prevailing with the 9th Circuit judges, he said, if it imposed
regulations limiting the practice to certain parts of the city or required the involvement of medical professionals. But he said he doubts its total ban on tattoo parlors will pass constitutional review.

The state-wide Massachusetts ban on tattooing was deemed unconstitutional by Judge Barbara Rouse in 2000, who ruled on a civil case brought by a tattooist and the ACLU challenging the ban. In her opinion, Judge Rouse said that tattooing is an ancient art form practiced in almost every culture. She added:

“Persons obtain tattoos to demonstrate commitment to other persons, to institutions, to religious beliefs, and to political and personal beliefs. The medium on which the drawn image appears should not be relevant when determining whether something is ‘speech’; the tattoo itself is symbolic speech deserving of First Amendment protection.”

[...]

“The current ban on tattooing has promoted an underground tattoo
industry with no controls which, in turn, has increased health risks.”

Read more on the Massachusetts tattoo battle in this
New Yorker article
.

That was a state court case, however, and limited in its impact on other bans outside Mass. When a case challenging South Carolina’s tattoo ban, White v. South Carolina, was appealed to the US Supreme Court, the highest court in the country refused to hear it (even with Ken Starr arguing it). The tattoo ban was eventually overturned in 2004. [More on that case here and see the S.C. appellate case here.]

FYI: The last state ban to be overturned was Oklahoma in 2006.

Now, with the 9th Circuit Federal Court of Appeals looking into tattoo protections under the constitution, these local bans might also brought down, and just as important, another court will find tattooing as an art form.

Will keep on eye on it and let you know how it goes.

UPDATE: More legal analysis on HuffPo

Original post: First Amendment & Tattoos

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