- feature
- MONDAY NOVEMBER 13 2006 12:00 PM
Needled News by Marisa DiMattia
Submitted by Marisa_DiMattia
Edited by Rahodeb
Tattooing should be illegal once more. Thats what I was thinking for the first time in my life after a phone conference with a cheezy marketing director who sought to impress me with his knowledge of tattoo cool by using words like tats or getting tatted or some other cringe-worthy variation. He said he wanted his project to appeal to serious ink collectors and the cute chick with ass antlers. Somehow I managed to swallow the vomit in my mouth and decline the offer to work with him.
Now, Ive trumpeted the revolution of a tattoo democracy where information on the best tattooists is shared, studios are sterile, and Kat Von D is the new object of female beauty. I fully embrace the feel good stories like those in the news this past week about one grandma getting tattooed or a fans indelible tribute to news hottie Andersen Cooper.
But I confess. There are certain moments when I long for the time when tattoos were just badass. Im having one of those moments, and so today, I dedicate Needled News to the ole Russian criminal tattoo.

Im particularly inspired by Film Threats review of Mark of Cain, a documentary of tattoos in Russias penal colonies by director Alix Lambert, who also wrote one of my favorite tattoo books Russian Prison Tattoos: Codes of Authority, Domination, and Struggle.
Film Threat offers a glimpse into Mark of Cain that helps me realize that no matter how much tattoo coverage I have, Im only just as hood as Justin Timberlake and as cool as a CEO who calls 'em tatts:
Provided with no conventional tools, these behind-bars artists take inventive measures to conjure forth their dermal impressions. Creating soot by burning the sole of a shoe, then combining these dark ashes with their own urine, the prisoners mix ink. Using windup shavers, writing pens, and guitar strings, they fabricate machines to inject this thick liquid beneath their skin. Sure, theyre concerned about contracting diseases. But what the hell. Most are already infected with TB, an inevitable consequence of Russian prison life.
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Take aging Viktor, sporting a potbelly and unkempt, Bad Santa beard. His chest is forever branded with side-by-side images of Lenin, Marx, and Engels. The trio stares from his skin like a Communist Mt. Rushmore. Meanwhile, the Russian leaders likenesses provide a practical advantage. If they sentenced you to death, explains Evgeny, another convict in for murder, then they wouldnt shoot you. Because it was a tattoo of the leader.
Judging from the skin-ink designs worn by his peers, Viktor can tell when their legal woes began. In the late twenties, he explains in the film, eagles were a favored motif. Soon afterwards, political leaders like those staining his own belly became the rage. Now, Viktor observes younger inmates wearing grotesque, exaggerated patterns. They have devils frying a priest on a bonfire, he proclaims disapprovingly. Its all rubbish.
The film sounds just as engaging as Lamberts book but she's still looking for a distributor to release it on DVD in the US.
Beyond their cultural significance shown by Lambert, some of the prison tattoos are incredibly artistic even if created with pee. To better understand what I mean, pick up the two volumes of the Russian Criminal Tattoo Encyclopedia.
Heavier on the imagery than Lamberts book, the Encyclopedias include drawings of popular criminal tattoo motifs by former Russian prison guard, Danzig Baldaev, and photos by Sergei Vasiliev. You can see a slideshow of some of these images on BBC news online, including this one below of what Id call the original Suicide Girls:

For both, men and women, the Encyclopedias feature a variety of criminal motifs. Im a particular fan of the sexual tattoos and even picked up a new position or two. Add that to Stalin as the Grim Reaper and other death effigies, and you have a great holiday gift!
Most important, these books are a piece of history because I dont see a third prison volume coming out. As the tide of tattoo culture turns, were more likely to see Clay Aiken tattoo portraits than of Lenin. And so goes the revolution.
Marisa_DiMattia is a lawyer and editor of Needled.com, a blog on tattoo art and culture.




Comments
JoLeigh
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