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Marisa_DiMattia

Marisa_DiMattia

NEWSWIRE

I'm lost

MAR 12, 2007 10:40 AM

I've been obsessed with celebrity tattoos lately. They're inescapable. I've seen clients walk into tattoo studios brandishing CD covers, wrestling magazines, and Perez Hilton print-outs. Online tattoo forums flame over whether it's cool to get Bam Magera's body art. And the news headlines, well, they taunt me.

All I want to do is sit back and reflect upon the national repercussions of the Scooter Libby trial, but then Robbie Williams busts outta rehab with a new tattoo and I'm forced to take stock of this momentous event.



By getting love tattooed across his knuckles on his right hand, what is Robbie telling us? Did he find God's love in detox? Or was he lonely and relegated to self-love? I'd also like to know what it is about rehab that drives people to the tattoo studio. Not once, but twice, we witnessed America's train wreck begging for the needle after stays in luxury treatment centers.

It's not like these celebs are going Straight Edge. The booze-filled post-tattoo partying does not indicate a non-tox trend, and I don't see tattoos like these catching on in Hollywood.

Instead, many actors and musicians--you know, creative types--search the depths of their platinum souls for body art that speaks for them, illustrating their very essence. Here's what they come up with: the backside bow, the mini wings, the forearm dice, and of course, the scratcher portrait of your TrimSpa suga-mama.

Ok, I'll accept that last one. Being Anna Nicole's bitch was limited in its lucrativeness. However, there's no excuse for multi-platinum artists, even if they are straight outta Compton.

The Game, aka Jayceon Tylor, refuses to pay for his tattoos--and it shows. ContactMusic.com quotes the rapper on his body decoration decisions:

"My tattoos are always free, man. I can pretty much walk in anywhere I fancy and they'll do one for free. If they're not, I'm walking out. [...] "I don't know how many I've got. S**t, I stopped counting after, like, the first two. I don't plan them. I just wake up with the idea and I go in that day."



I wouldn't call it sage tattoo advice but, then again, I aint gangsta. I suppose it's a g-thang: Money. Cash. Hoes. Sub-par body art.

In other headlines, Nylon magazine's March issue featured the fabulous Christina Ricci on the cover with the tag "Tattooed Rebel or Girl Next Door?", which I thought was funny as most of Ricci's patchwork tattoos were covered in the photo except some small blur on her ankle. Now Ricci's got a number of tattoos and a kick-ass style but I wouldn't trumpet her as the tattoo rebel darling. This crown clearly goes to Saint Angelina, and who among us here is not on Team Jolie?

Finally, in this needled celeb round-up, I'd like to welcome my fave comedian/activist/rapper Margaret Cho into the loving arms of freakdom. She's just added another beautiful Japanese inspired tattoo to her fabulous collection, which includes an Ed Hardy piece that winds around her belly-dancing waist. Her latest work of art is by Andrew Moore of Shogun Tattoo in Pasadena, CA.


Photo by Ian Harvie.

I'm hoping more celebrities show the same tattoo intelligence and not treat ink as swag. Free does not necessarily equal good. If more beautiful artwork adorned the bodies of tabloid staples, perhaps tattooing as fine art would become a trend, not a post-rehab adventure.


Marisa_DiMattia is a lawyer and editor of Needled.com, a blog on tattoo art and culture.

minusthepenguin

minusthepenguin

Ypsilanti, MI
August 2005

MAR 12, 2007 03:49 PM

They should just give me all their money. I'll put it to better use. To have that much money and be in the public eye that much but have lame ink like that.. just.. pisses me right off.

Angelina for the win though, seriously. I love that woman.

Catbones

Catbones

USA
December 2006

MAR 14, 2007 08:29 AM

What's with celebs and their choices in tattoo artists?
Do they just bop into the first/closest shop on their route? Poor recommendations from friends?

It seems like time after time after time I see celebrity tattoo that are horribly sub-standard in quality. One looks on wondering how someone with so much success and presumably so much money ends up getting ragged looking work. I guess celebs are just like the "average guy", a lack of understanding of the industry, the good bad and ugly, all that...

I always think "Jeez, if I had his/her money I'd be booking an appointment with Filip Leu or Tom Renshaw or someone, not whatever hack was down the street." *shrug*

As always, thanks for your insight and outstanding doccumentation of these things, even when they aren't that outstanding in themselves. Needled News remains my favorite column on SG.com news! =)

Cheers!