Passion for
tattoos on display as thousands gather at London convention
Photo:
A tattoo artist, right, watches as another works on a tattoo on Ralph
Buchholz, a computer scientist from Dortmund, Germany, during London's
International Tattoo Convention.
LONDON- The sound of buzzing needles, the smell of
incense and the sight of full-body artwork drew thousands of tattoo
enthusiasts to trendy east London this weekend. The first
International London Tattoo Convention opened Friday as more than 150
of the world's best tattoo artists arrived at a former brewery to
share their craft with veterans and newcomers to body art. Many attend
a tattoo convention to show off their work, purchase body jewelry or
even pick up life-long souvenirs on their bodies. For some, the best
part is the "brotherhood," said Mike Davis, who has been a tattoo
artist in San Francisco for 18 years. "You make friends from all over
the world, so it's like a big reunion every time there's a
convention," Davis said. Artists from as far as Australia, Japan,
Greece and Italy have set up booths within the Old Truman Brewery on
Brick Lane, an area that is a focal point for fashionable London
artists as well as for the city's Bangladeshi community.
Convention-goers can schedule appointments or stop by for an impromptu
tattoo, depending on the artist. "A convention is similar to a band
being on tour: if you are someone's favourite artist, this is a chance
for them to get work by you," Davis said. Organizers expect at least
15,000 people to attend this weekend and plan to make the London
convention an annual gathering, according to Roland Hyams, a spokesman
for the convention's organizing committee. "The Western habit of
tattooing began in Britain, and London was really the heart of that,"
Hyams said. This form of permanent body art entered Western culture in
1769 when the explorer Capt. James Cook travelled to Tahiti and saw
their tattoos, Hyams said. He brought the concept to Britain, where it
became especially popular with soldiers and sailors. Hyams said it is
believed that Cook coined the word "tattoo" from the sound the hammer
made when hitting the needle used to cut the skin in Tahitian
tattooing. The art form's popularity spread beyond Britain, and
enthusiasts now gather for conventions all over the world. Ernst
Wegener, 62, travelled from Boedefeld, Germany, for the London event.
He has 55 piercings and has spent 88 hours under the needle completing
his full-torso tattoos. "It's very significant," Wegener said of the
"tree of life" tattoo bearing his initials on his back. "It's
associated with my name, and the branches of the tree represent life,
eating and drinking." Tattoos often have special meaning to their
wearers, said the London-based tattoo artist Lal Hardy. He said he
thinks people get tattoos for many different reasons, but often their
motivation is rooted in a desire to change something about themselves.
"Human beings are never satisfied with their bodies," Hardy said.
"Tattoos are just one branch of that. It's something you can get for
yourself, and no one can steal it." By Emily Bellman