Posts Tagged ‘Political Tattoos’

Love is in the Air

By Rob • Sep 16th, 2011 • Category: ModBlog

It’s been a while since we’ve seen a Banksy tattoo and thanks to DreadHead702, we’ve got a new one to add to the collection.  This one in particular is a reproduction of one of Banksy’s more prominent works which is entitled “Love is in the Air”.



Raise your fist

By Rob • Sep 2nd, 2011 • Category: ModBlog

No fisting jokes this week.  This is just a solid piece of work from Viktor Sigil from Self Sacrifice in London.



The British Bulldog

By Rob • Aug 24th, 2011 • Category: ModBlog

Younger ModBlog readers may not get this reference, but anyone who has read anything on WWII knows that the original British Bulldog wasn’t a guy in tights.  Winston Churchill was famously nicknamed the bulldog during the war by the Russians for his dogged determination in fighting the Nazis.  Even when England was at it’s worst, he wouldn’t back down and with his ties to the US, was able to turn the tide and win the war.  This particular portrait of Churchill as a bulldog was done by Rich Phipson who works at Star Crossed Tattoo in Hong Kong.



Speak softly and carry a big stick

By Rob • Feb 16th, 2011 • Category: ModBlog

Teddy Roosevelt is known for a lot of things, being the first American to win a Nobel prize, getting the Panama canal finished, establishing the first national parks, and having his face carved into a mountain.  Well, he can now add having his face etched into skin thanks to Andy Johnson from Cap City Tattoo in Columbus, Ohio.

Working around the moles that are on the skin, Andy pulled off an almost charcoal-esque portrait.  You can check out more portraits in the portrait tattoo gallery, or if political tattoos are more your thing, then head over to the political and patriotic tattoo gallery.



El Che

By Rob • Jan 6th, 2011 • Category: ModBlog

The monochromatic image of Che Guevara created by Jim Fitzpatrick is one of the most recognizable portraits in the world.  However, that portrait was not the only image of Che and it is refreshing to see a portrait tattoo of him that doesn’t use the “standard” image.  Zoran from Tattoo Hard Core in Serbia added this image of Che to the political and patriotic tattoo gallery.  He made the interesting decision to use yellow and black as opposed to greyscale to craft the image, giving the tattoo the feel of a faded photograph.



A modified rebellion

By Rob • Aug 25th, 2010 • Category: ModBlog

There are some stories that as controversial as they may be, do need to be told.  Before I begin, it’s important that you know a few things about the subject matter of the post.  First off, the current Republic of Turkey wasn’t always a democratic nation.  The area known today as Turkey was home to one of the earliest human settlements.  Over the centuries many empires have risen and fallen, with the most notable being the Ottoman Empire, which ruled over 6 centuries until WWI.  Following the first world war, and the defeat of the Ottoman Empire a military commander named Mustafa Kemal Atatürk led the country to become a democratic and secular nation.  The Ottoman Empire had previously ruled under Islamic law, and when Atatürk became the first president of Turkey he moved towards the western style of democracy with the separation of Church and State.  In the years following the foundation of the new Turkey, Atatürk pushed through a great many reforms to every aspect of life in Turkey.  Civic courts replaced Islamic courts, women were grated equal status, and the official language was changed from Arabic to Turkish.

In the decades following Atatürk’s death, he has been acclaimed time and time again for his contributions towards cultural reforms.  As for the Turkish government, it continued on following in the footsteps of it’s first leader.  Over time the parties in power have changed, and currently the party in power wishes to revert the changes that Atatürk made, and return Turkey to an Islamic republic.  The conservative Justice and Development (AKP) party has presently put forth a motion for a constitutional referendum that would allow them to alter the structure of the government.

As for which side in the debate is right, it is not my position to judge.

What I am here for is to share with you the reactions that of some of the Turkish people are having to these proposed changes.

rebellion

More and more Turkish people, from all walks of life and socio-economic standings, are emblazoning their appendages with the signature of the controversial Turkish trailblazer Mustafa Kemal Ataturk who made Turkey the secular nation it is today. The tattoo reads simply enough “K.Ataturk” in a scripted text.  The history behind the specific Ataturk signature that is used for the tattoos is as politically charged as the man himself. According to popular belief, it was the same signage that Ataturk used when he signed legislation to annihilate the Ottoman alphabet, which was in classical Arabic, in favor of a Latin alphabet that was in line with secular European nations.

The resistance to the AKP is so fierce in Turkey, that many tattoo parlors offer discounted prices for the Ataturk tattoo and some offer it entirely for free. Apparently the price for government-supported religious freedom is a price that some people are willing to pay for in blood.

I think this is the first nation-wide protest that I’ve heard of that is being spread through tattoos.  Whether you agree with the position that the protesters have or not, the key thing to remember is that these people are showing to the world what their beliefs are, in the form of a permanent modification.  As someone who has attended protests in the past, I’ve seen varying levels of commitment to the causes.  From extremists who smash window and light cars on fire, to grandmothers holding up a sign on a lawn.  I honestly can say I don’t think many of the people I have met are so passionate about their causes to have them tattooed on their bodies.

The thing to remember is that these tattoos are not just being done in protest.  Many of the people getting them feel that Atatürk was the man that brought their country to the place it is now, and for them, their national identity is as much a part of them as their own skin.

Like I mentioned before, this subject isn’t one I can comment on, but what I can comment on is the level of commitment these people are displaying.  Would you be willing to get a tattoo for similar reasons as these people?



No Need For Temples

By Jordan Ginsberg • Aug 11th, 2009 • Category: ModBlog


Hoo boy, so, I was honestly just kidding yesterday when I mused about the possibility of Nelson Mandela being dragged through the mud by some commenters, but sure enough, it literally took only a single post before a political flame war broke out. Hey, fine. I guess Mr. Mandela is a more polarizing figure than I’d anticipated. But you know, I do so enjoy a challenge, and this gorgeous portrait of the Dalai Lama was too good not to share, but I’m curious now—what sorts of terrible, unseemly revelations will be unearthed following its posting? Did he buy an HD TV, but hasn’t yet sprung for an HD tuner? Has it been weeks since he’s emptied the dehumidifier? Is he hiding a Kenyan birth certificate? Don’t let me down, folks.

(Beautiful tattoo by Dave Allen at Preying Mantis Tattoo in Lakewood, Colorado.)

Tattoo Hollywood, BME’s first tattoo convention, is coming to Los Angeles from August 21-23, featuring contests, prizes and some of the best artists from around the world! Click here for more information.

See more in Portrait Tattoos (Tattoos)



The Truth It Becomes You

By Jordan Ginsberg • Aug 10th, 2009 • Category: ModBlog


Positivity parade! This expertly rendered Nelson Mandela portrait/inspirational bust comes all the way from Cape Town, South Africa, and more specifically, from Rob Turner at Freestylers Tattoo Lounge in said city. There’s a lot to like here; this is really lovely work of a figure who’s probably one of the players on the world stage least likely to tarnish his own legacy any time soon. That said, I’m looking very forward to the revelations in the comments that he sold poison milk to schoolchildren or uses leaded gasoline or collects Jonas Brothers memorabilia or whatever.

Tattoo Hollywood, BME’s first tattoo convention, is coming to Los Angeles from August 21-23, featuring contests, prizes and some of the best artists from around the world! Click here for more information.



Swinging in the Chariot

By Jordan Ginsberg • Feb 5th, 2009 • Category: ModBlog


Oh hey, it’s whathisname, that terribly unpopular fella from the television, Emperor Hope Hussein? Something like that? Anyway, Tony Styles from Long Island, New York, sent in this happy rendering of the man, with Martin Luther King Jr. behind him, keeping a watchful eye. Also, nice to see this is the American version of the president, what with the flag pin and all. Crisis averted.

See more in Tony Styles Portfolio (Tattoo Artist Portfolios)



Full Coverage: Links From All Over (Nov. 13, 2008)

By Jordan Ginsberg • Nov 13th, 2008 • Category: ModBlog


Gilbert Arenas’s new Obama tattoo (Photo credit: Dan Hellie / NBC Washington)

[DC Sports Bog] Update! We mentioned the other day that the NBA’s Gilbert Arenas (who once actually gave himself the nickname, “the Black President”) had cast off his indecision and jumped in head-first into his support for Obama with a hand tattoo, the photographic evidence of which can now be seen above. Arenas told the photographer he got the tattoo so that, among other reasons, he can look at his hand during games and see the words “We Believe.” This is the same reason I got “Delicious Nachos” tattooed on my hands — everyone needs a pick-me-up sometimes, right? Oh, delicious nachos. I’m feeling better already.

Photo credit: Retna

[TMZ] I can’t describe how dirty I feel linking to TMZ and Fox News. Nonetheless, it’s worth it to get the details on a story this goddamn insane. Basically, Stephen Baldwin just got the initials “HM” tattooed on him for “Hannah Montana.” Strange enough? Well hot holy damn, try this next graf on for size:

The idea reportedly stems back to a dare that Cyrus made last year. The two became friends after meeting at the White House, when Cyrus told Baldwin that he could appear on her Disney show “Hannah Montana” – of which his daughters are huge fans – if he would get a tattoo, TMZ said.

Stephen Baldwin and Miley Cyrus, who are friends (!), met at the White House, and while there, took the time to hash out a tattoo-related dare. This actually happened. In real life. Head asplode.

[Somatechnics] Calling all academics who didn’t leave the site in disgust after the previous two vacuous celebrity stories! The good folks at the Somatechnics Research Centre at Macquarie University in New South Wales, Australia, have put out a call for papers to be presented at next year’s fifth Somatechnics conference. Rather than absolutely mangling the description with my layman’s terms, here’s the deal for those unfamiliar:

“Somatechnics” is a recently coined term used to highlight the inextricability of soma and techné, of the body (as a culturally intelligible construct) and the techniques (dispositifs and ‘hard technologies’) in and through which bodies are formed and transformed. This term, then, supplants the logic of the ‘and’, indicating that technés are not something we add to or apply to the body, but rather, are the means in and through which bodies are constituted, positioned, and lived. As such, the term reflects contemporary understandings of the body as the incarnation or materialization of historically and culturally specific discourses and practices.

Possible topics:
• Somatechnologies of the self (‘non-mainstream’ body modification, body sculpting, performance, fashion, drug use, ‘self-mutilation’, religious practice, etc)
• medical somatechnologies (cosmetic, reproductive, imaging, corrective, sex (re)assignment, implantation, enhancement, bio-techs, public health initiatives, etc)
• somatechnics of law
• somatechnologies of gender, sexuality, race, class, etc
• somatechnologies of normalcy and pathology
• somatechnics of war
• somatechnologies of the post-human (cyborgs, nanotechnology, virtuality, etc)
• soma-ethics

A number of IAM members have spoken at this conference in the past and, by all accounts, it’s a fascinating and exciting project to be a part of. For those interested, abstracts are due in by November 30, 2008.