tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21542495.post114037815689278783..comments2023-05-12T11:49:11.618-04:00Comments on modified state of mind: tattoos: art vs. fadTanya/Tikay/Tatihttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11470110737832236632noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21542495.post-1145933039870218522006-04-24T22:43:00.000-04:002006-04-24T22:43:00.000-04:00Not true, I read it all! And I've actually been wa...Not true, I read it all! And I've actually been waiting for someone to contradict me on that point. I think that the mod community sometimes gets defensive when anyone seems to be telling them that being different is wrong and that they should want to be accepted. I just didn't want any of those folk to get nervous...I love to prove people wrong, especially if I make them realize that modders arent a certain "type" of person. There are modders of (almost) every age, race, geographical region etc. I don't think that we should have to ACTIVELY convince anyone that modding is beautiful, but if we change some attitudes by just being ourselves, awesome.Tanya/Tikay/Tatihttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11470110737832236632noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21542495.post-1145928176674158622006-04-24T21:22:00.000-04:002006-04-24T21:22:00.000-04:00"Personally, I think that those involved in the bo..."Personally, I think that those involved in the body modification community shouldn't have to work toward legitimizing modification in the mainstream. If the majority of people can't see the beauty of modification, why should we try to convince them?"<BR/><BR/>We might try to convince them because they're missing out on beauty. We might also try to convince them because, like it or not, their derision will have an effect on us. Mods are limiting in life, and people will judge you by them. To willingly become visibly modified seems to me to be a statement both of willingness to bear that metaphorical cross, and an opportunity to, by your actions, prove the stereotypes wrong.<BR/><BR/>That all having been said, I have a brief anecdote to relate. I have a penchant for drawing on myself at random intervals. Sometimes my self-marking get kinda prominent and involved. When this happens, people inevitably ask me to design a tattoo for them. Over the course of of three days, I received the following commissions:<BR/><BR/>1) A burning guitar with a dragon wrapped around it to be used as an armpiece. (boring, but the guy in question was at least looking at getting it done by a tattooist of some notable repute whose name presently escapes me)<BR/><BR/>2) A butterfly for a girl's lower back (Cough. Sputter. Hack. I remember vividly trying to explain to this girl precisely how overdone and horrible this design was. She mentioned something about being a very spiritual person, and this design having great meaning to her. I found it, frankly, hard to believe)<BR/><BR/>3) Another butterfly back-piece (No more need be said)<BR/><BR/>4) A dragon design intended to run the length of this one heavily muscled guy's spine. (he was the boyfriend [I think] of the first butterfly girl, and mentioned his "spirituality" in connection with his tattoo choice. Do you think there might be a gene that cause people with unforgivably boring tattoos to flock togethere?)<BR/><BR/>5) A small design containg a cross and the "small bird from Buddhist lore that sits on your shoulder and tells you whether you're going to die today" (I'm unfamiliar with Buddhist lore, and cannot attest to the truth of such a phenomenon). Surprisingly, this person did not mention her spirituality, and the cross was intended only as a symbol of "ultimate suffering for a cause" rather than an overt expression of Christianity. This is the only design I actually bothered to try my hand at.<BR/><BR/>There is a lot more to be said on this entry, actually, but I don't feel like writing comments so long that no one would want to read them.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21542495.post-1143500203893184902006-03-27T17:56:00.000-05:002006-03-27T17:56:00.000-05:00These are exactly the type of tattoos that the un-...These are exactly the type of tattoos that the un-marked population of the world use to sterotype tattooed people in general. Many artistic tattoos are kept hidden by their wearers or remain un-noticed. But it seems like the owners of poorly executed or overtly sexual or racist images, go out of their way to flaunt them in the eyes of the public. Of course some tattoo artists also also doing their part to produce "art" of dubious merit.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com