2009-10-23

asian Girl's Tattoos



















Female tattoos – or tattoos that are feminine in design, and are usually favored by women or girls – are becoming more and more common.For the first fifty or sixty years after tattooing became commonplace and even mainstream in modern society,few women got tattoos-those that did were the exception and usually a touch eccentric or rebellious.

All that changed about twenty years ago when tattooing became more socially acceptable, largely due to the many celebrities who publicly sported tattoos. Some of these were women, and so the female tattoo became more common and acceptable. Nowadays most people find female tattoos sexy and attractive, they certainly aren't offensive anymore.

That having been said it’s still true that more men than women get tattoos and it’s even true that there is a little element of social rebellion inherent in a woman’s decision to get a tattoo, although this is less and less the case, tattoos are more like a fashion item these days.

However, female ink is no longer shocking, and we no longer jump to conclusions about a woman’s moral character based on whether or not she has a few tattoos!

2009-10-22

Wim Delvoye And Tim Steiner's Tattoo Art


"It's art because it got sold" Wim Delvoye, a Belgian contemporary artist says. This is a sort of dire truth about the current characteristics of contemporary art. However, Rembrandt knew about it (he insisted his prints sell together in a bundle from the first print to the last rather than separately), Warhol practically invented the art factory if not refined the concept from Rembrandt’s time, and today the art getting the most attention is the art with the biggest receipt. So yes, if there is a demand and willingness to pay for an item of questionable artistic quality, then maybe this is a new contemporary deciding factor of what art is- if someone will pay for it.
Wim Delvoye's artwork entitled “Tattooing Tim” is the controversial piece at hand. He has tattooed the back of Tim Steiner with a composition made up of popular tattoos such as the Virgin Mary, roses, skulls, bats, birds, and Asian culture references. This is a permanent composition on Tim Steiner’s back until his death. Once dead, his skin went for $215,000 at a Philips de Pury auction (specialized in fresh contemporary art auctions) in 2008 where hte highest bidder was by a German art collector, Rik Reinking, who will claim the skin once Tim Steiner is dead.

First he tattooed Louis Vuitton and Disney characters onto the skin of pigs, but making a man a living and breathing work of art, takes the concept to a whole new level, especially since he comes with a price tag and ownership rights once his heart stops beating. The sale agreement gives a cut to the gallery/auction De Pury & Luxembourg, Steiner, and Wim Delvoye and Tim Steiner will show his back about three times yearly to public and private shows. Imagine if your paintings could talk and had a life of their own?

The questions it raises are exactly what the art world craves and loves to talk about from redefining an artwork, the role of the art market, the ethical, and legal issues at hand. What if Tim Steiner one day decides to get it removed without warning, or disappears, where will the art collector find him, what if he develops a skin disease, and in this case will it still be art? Then again Damien Hirst’s formaldehyde shark “The Physical Impossibility of Death in Someone Living” got a second chance after it was deteriorating to stand as a work of art, which already addressed those controversies.

The act of buying this Delvoye art piece is putting a tracking number on a person for the rest of his life. They best become good friends or send holiday cards once in a while. It’s a scary thought having to live your life knowing you’re a display piece until the end- even a trophy wife would shiver. Then, again, these issues may have been why the skin did not go for more than a quarter million, otherwise that’s a big risk to pay. It seems immortality, the eternal quality of artworks, is a big incentive to go through with this idea “I [Tim Steiner] will exist forever, at least a part of me will, and I find that concept more exciting than morbid." It’s true his skin will be talked about and presented long after he will be gone, but that is just it- his skin will remain forever, but will the skin’s carrier as a person be remembered or will the art piece lose its effect once the person has stopped living? It’s the thought of his bought skin and the uncertain outcome of this whole story, which is causing chaos and redefinitions of art. How would this be different had Delvoye presented an already stretched tattooed skin as art?

In the end does the tattoo image itself have any importance for the entirety of tattoo art and its history? Tattoos are known to be body decorations or identity markers, but can these be considered art? At first ShContemporary in Shanghai was skeptical and dismissed it as art altogether, refusing to exhibit the idea. Maybe the tattoos themselves weren’t even important for conveying his idea, but simply the only medium that makes sense to use on a human’s skin for canvas to get this controversial reaction. Controversy doesn’t necessarily mean art, so what was artistic in this art piece? Is it the intent to shock or the creative process- because every person with a tattoo on their back is not a work of art and they don’t have suitors wanting to buy their skin postmortem.

Top Tattoo Designs Of All Time
























Dragons: Arguably the most popular mythical figures of all time, dragon tattoos are general statements of strength and power. However, their specialized meanings will differ depending on whether you choose an Eastern or Western dragon design.

2009-10-10

Tribal Dragon Tattoos


DRAGON TATTOOS are one of the most popular designs all over the world. It can go in any category, whether abstraction, naturalistic, dedication

Throughout history,dragon tattoos have never been out of fashion and had been used as a symbol in some part of the world It can be drawn as menacing or regal depending

Dragon tattoos come in two popular forms: the Chinese or japanese dragon of the east with its long, snake-like body and the European dragon of the west with its powerful wings and long neck. The European dragon usually symbolizes power and fear, a depiction of evil where as the Chinese dragon usually symbolizes unity and conformity, a depiction of good.

.Some of these dragon design have additional background scenery where they are depicted flying in the clouds, swimming in the ocean, crawling on top of mountains or ravaging small villages. But the most common depiction of a dragon is being done as tribal dragon tattoos due to both its simplicity (the majority colour being in either black or gray with the additional colour to highlight the dragon) and its complexity.

Most often, the eastern dragons are the ones being used as a basis for the designs for the tribal dragon tattoos . Chinese and Japanese designs are the ones most common to be created into tattoos. Both have similar features: long, snake-like body, wingless and have horns. The only difference between these two dragons is their claws.. Their long, wingless bodies are less complicated to draw and since tribal tattoos are mostly being done in one colour (two at the most), the outcome of these dragon are more elegant looking and sophisticated.

Though, some in today's society, eastern dragons that are being created into tribal dragon tattoos is being depicted as a symbol of fear and power; a contrast to the real symbolism of the eastern dragons.

Some people today would ask for a tribal dragon tattoo when they want to look tough or powerful. They would look for the best dragon design and ask to have it done. But there are still those who see the eastern dragon as a symbol of wisdom and would ask for a dragon as a sign of respect. And still, others would just like a tribal dragon tattoo because the artistry is very well made and it looks good in the body.


The most current in style lower back tattoos






















The most current in style Lower back tattoo are:


Angel Designs - angel tattoo project a forward thinking belief in life and it is believed that when a man wears an angel tattoo the he likes the ladies!.

2009-10-06

3 D design tattoos

2009-10-04

The yakuza Japanese Tattoo
























Japanese tattoo art has a lot of names - irezumi and horimono in the Japanese language. Irezumi is the word meant for the basic visible ink covering huge parts of the body like the back. Japanese tattoo art has a extremely extensive tradition.
Since the influence of Confucianism and Buddhism over the Japanese culture, tattoo art has a damaging connotation for the majority of the Japanese individuals. In the eyes of an ordinary Japanese a ink is considered a mark of a yakuza - a member of the Japanese mafia - and a macho emblem of members of the lesser classes.

The Early History of Japanese Tattoo Art
Archaeologists believe that the initial settlers of Japan, the Ainu citizens, used facial tattoos. Chinese papers tell concerning the Wa inhabitants - the Chinese name meant for their Japanese neighbours - and the individuals lifestyle of diving into water for fish and shells and decorating the total skin with tattoos. These reports are in the region of 1700 years old.

For the superior developed Chinese culture, tattooing was a barbaric undertaking. As soon as Buddhism was brought from China to Japan and with it the solid influence of the Chinese culture, tattooing got destructive connotations. Criminals were marked with tattoos to punish and identify them within society.

Tattoos in the Edo Period
In the Edo period - 1603-1868 - Japanese tattoo drawings became a part of ukiyo-e - the suspended world culture. Prostitutes - yujos - of the pleasure quarters used tattoos to improve the individuals appeal for customers. Skin tattoos were furthermore used by labourers and firemen.

From 1720 on, the tattooing of criminals became an formal punishment and replaced taking away of the nose and the ears. The criminal received a ring ink around the arm in support of every offence or else a character ink on his temple. Tattooing criminals was continued until 1870, at what time it was abolished by the new Meiji government of the Japanese Emperor.
This visible punishment produced a further genre of outcasts which had no place taking part in society and nowhere to go. A lot of these outlaws were ronin - master less samurai warriors. They had no alternatives than organizing gangs. These men created the start of the yakuza - the controlled criminals inside Japan inside the twentieth century.

Japanese Tattoo Prints
In 1827 the ukiyo-e artist Kuniyoshi Utagawa published the original 6 emblems of the 108 Heroes of the Suikoden. The Suikoden were something like ancient Robin Hoods - honourable bandits. The story is based on a classic Chinese novel - Shui-Hi-Chuan, which dates from the 13th and 14th century. The novel was initially translated into Japanese in 1757 by Okajima Kanzanion. By the turn of the 18th to the 19th century the story was available with illustrations by Katsushika Hokusai. The novel of the 108 honourable bandits was extremely accepted in the sphere of Japan and created a kind of Suikoden trend amongst Japanese towns inhabitants.

Kuniyoshi's Suikoden ukiyo-e emblems bare the heroes in colourful, detailed body tattoos. Japanese ink prints and tattoo drawings in general at that moment became stylish. Tattoos were considered iki - cool - however were restricted to the poorer classes.
The richness and fantasy of the Japanese tattoo print emblems made known by Kuniyoshi are used by a quantity of ink artists up to this generation.

The Meiji Restoration until Postwar Japan
Within its strive to adopt Western civilizations, the Imperial Meiji government outlawed tattooing as something thought about a barbaric relict of the past. The funny thing was that the Japanese irezumi artists right away got brand new customers - the sailors from the foreign ships anchoring inside Japanese harbours. As a consequence Japanese ink designs was spread to the West.
In the course of the first half of the twentieth century, horimono remained a forbidden art form until 1948, as soon as the prevention was officially lifted. A few say that this step had become crucial to permit the demand by soldiers of the American occupation forces for horimono and irezumi.

Tattoo Art in Modern Japan
A number of younger individuals may well think about tattooing being cool, the majority of the Japanese population still considers it while something connected to the gangland of mafia gangsters and a rough low caste tradition at the finest. Younger folks who consider tattoos as iki - a marginal amongst Japanese youth - tend to use partial tattoos inside Western style on the persons upper arms, someplace it is not directly visible

The Most Popular Japanese Tattoos

























Let's talk about where you can find Japanese tattoos. Japanese tattoos are not very hard thing to find on the internet. I bet that you can spend less than five minutes doing a quick search on Google and find thousands of Japanese Tattoos

No matter which Japanese tattoos you decide on, just make certain that you are 110% happy with it before getting it tattooed

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