Skin Deep|Issue 275

What do tattoo artists do when they’re not tattooing? In After Hours, Wayne Simmons talks to some of his favourite artists about the  things they get up to when the studio lights go down. This month, he meets Amy Savage, tattooist and animal rights activist.

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Recently, I’ve become fasci-nated with the idea of tattoo art as a form of protest. This isn’t anything new, of course, tattoos having been used to express political dissent for as long as they’ve been around. We see the darker side of this in Danzig Baldaev’s popular series of books, Russian Criminal Tattoos. Throughout the series, Baldaev collects hundreds of photographs of convict tattoos which he took over a lifetime working as a prison guard. Among these are white supremacist tattoos as well as script giving voice to racist and homophobic tendencies, none of which are appealing on any level or, indeed, well executed. But tattoo art has been used to express progressive political views, too, over the years, championing popular revolutions and giving hope to those feeling downtrodden. We see this in Issue 271’s excellent Serpents of Bienville piece where Sean Herman talks of how the tattoos he made for his friend Robert Waldrup, portraits of Frida Kahlo, Malcolm X, Huey Newton and Che Guevara, helped strengthen his resolve for social justice. ‘In moments where I may have otherwise felt muted or dissuaded from expressing myself, they have emboldened me to speak my mind,’ Robert said. ‘My portraits are not only beautiful tattoos, but daily reminders that my thoughts, my emotions, and my words matter.’

This story is from the Issue 275 edition of Skin Deep.

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This story is from the Issue 275 edition of Skin Deep.

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