TRIBAL TATTOOS: CULTURAL FAD & CULTURAL TRAVESTY!
(C) Wade MacMorrighan, 2007

Okay, we've all seen 'em...the ripped guys with a tribal armband tattood around their bicep! So far as tattoo as an expression of art nd consciousness goes (or lack there of, as I shall later go into) this one's been WAY over done!

Now, I'll be the first one to admit that if a sexy man with pecs of steel and arms with muscles ontop of his muscles walks into a room witha tribal tattoo there'd be something about it that would simply make him, shall we say, "more *appealing*"! But, that's one of the facets of tribal tattoos as an art--it's supposed to look goo on the body, and take into context the shape and natural lines of one's body; even accentuating them.

But, far too many men and women are thoughtlessly getting tattoos without understanding the significance of the ink they bear-- this very well may have the potential to bastardize a respective culture! I wouldn't be opposed of requiring tattoo artists to mandate that their prospective customers know what their are getting--if it's tribal, or froim some other culture-- and what it means, or each respective shape or line consciously reflect in the culture from which is stems.

This is why more folks ought to spend hours of time studying what they want, and how best to express it as a form of "sacred geomotry", if you will. Look to one's own culture, first, if there are any extent pagan/tribval motifs that have survived, and apply specific images and ifeograms in the make-up oif your tattoo, to best express what it is that the tribal tattoo is meant to signify! After all, tattoos often marked a rite de passage; it was a journey because it originally took many days, rather than hours, for ancient tattoos to be applied. But, I digress...

Lets say that, for the sake of argument, you are a Gay man (this is an original idea of my own) that you want a tribal tattoo as a symbol demarcating Gay Pride. What choices are there? Well, there's an inverted piunk triangle that our Nazi pursecutors demanded we wear. But, I would like a butterfly for a variety or reasons constructed out of a tribal motif. Now, the reasons for this is that the butterfly often represents liminality and transformation or fluidity from one state to another. It is also an obsolete sign for Gay Liberation: during the 1970s lavender butterflies were used as such symbols, but I have never seen any, or found this reference on-line. Red butterflies were also thought to be witches in early-modern Britain, as well as a symbol for the soul. Even in Spain a derogatory term for a Gay man [mariposa] translates as "butterfly".

However, the lines and motifs that yield the eventual tribal tattoo ought to reflect a deeper meaning and belief that incorporate various shapes and lines of significance. What should such a tattoo imply by way of the incorporated motif? Well, Pride and Courage, as well as Love, or incorporating symbols associated with Protection and Defense, for instance. But, instead of just leaching off of other disparate cultures with no connection [such as Native American meets Greek and pseudo-Celtic] choose some motifs from a culture that has significance to you--personally!

This, however, is my own personal philosophy. YMMV! Though, I pine for the days when a tribal tattoo actually MEANT something--we need more tribal customs within our own social networks or communities. Moreover, get an inspired tattoo to mark a relationship one might hav with a respective deity--I am ALL in favour of religious contemporary Pagan tattoos! Still...one fascet I desperately want to thoroughly investigate is the evidence for ancient tattoos from various cultures, particularly through Europe, and what they maight have looked like.

Here are some links you might find useful:

* www.tattooideasandmore.com/Site_Map.html [Some good, basic, guidelines.]
* Troubleshooting Tribal Tattoos: www.inkedblog.com/archives/...ttoos.html [I love this highly informative Blog! I was surprised that Houston police were recently forced to cover up their ink when, according to a recent aticle, more than 40% of Americans are tattood, which is making employers severely revise their respective dress codes! So...what gives?]
* "Getting A Native American Tattoo: The Trouble with tribal Designs": www.native-languages.org/tattoo.htm
* Skin as Art and Anthropology: news.nationalgeographic.com/news....html
* Tribal Tattoos: www.tattooideasandmore.com/Trib...s.php
* History of Tattoos: www.designboom.com/history/...tory.html
* Tribal Tattoos Through History--A Visual Timeline: www.vanishingtattoo.com/tattoos.htm
* Art VS. Fad: modifiedstateofmind.blogspot.com/2...ml
* "Tattooing Now A Fad": modblog.bmezine.com/2006/09/...ow-a-fad/
* "Body Modification: Ancient & Modern": hubpages.com/hub/tattoos_piercing
* www.tattoosymbol.com/
* "Tattoo you? Think before you ink": blogs.news.com.au/courierma...nts/tattoo

If anyone else has any relavent links of interest to post in reply, please feel free to do so!

Take Care,
Wade
posted by:
MacMorrighan
Iowa
  • well, theres really a lot more to it than that. yeah, "nu tribal" is lame, and really doesnt mean anything...and thats what most people mean when they say they want a tribal. on the othe hand, there are polynesian tribals, and here's where it gets more confusing. some cultures, like the maori of new zealand, have meanings attached to many of their symbols...like spirals (koru) meaning new beginnings...representing the unfurling fern...or the fish hook, prevalent in many oceanic cultures, known to them as the hei matau, symbolizing luck on overseas journey, amon other things. but it isnt these that are the problem...these are used more in carvings and the like. its when people see a pic of a maori person with tattoos, and get those tattoos, that its a problem, because they symbolize theri fmily, lineage, heritage...someone would be getting someone else's life and history tattood on them without even knowing it.

    and then theres cultures like the hawaiian culture. one can take pretty much any symbol from traditional hawaiian tattoo (which consists of mostly triangles and hash marks) and use it...though theres no way of knowing what it means...becaue traditionally, it was the tattooer who gave meaning to the tattoo as it was done, based on the individual receiving it. i worked in a tat shop in hawaii for a while, and tourists would come in every day asking the meanings of hawaiian tribals...truth is, there isnt meaning to the designs, just meaning given to them when tattood.

    so, theres a lot more angles to tribals being good or bad...and in my personal opinion...iif some guy with muscles on muscles walked in somewhere with a tribal tattoo...id laugh....and more than likely make fun of him with my friends, if not to his face.
  • While i agree with you that sometimes people get "tribal style" tattoos just for looks, they dont know or care about the meaning. But to point out, you dont KNOW who those people are versus the people who have carefully researched and constructed personal designs signifying major life journeys or summits. It never pays to assume. The cultrual travesty we are in the midst of goes to such a more tragic place than tattoo misappropriation for sure.
    • Since when is there something wrong with getting a tattoo purely as "ornament"? Take a look at the main photo of this tribe. I did that 10 years ago, PURELY AS ORNAMENT, and it's one of the more beautiful tattoos I've ever made.

      Yeah, as a tattooer, I'm annoyed when someone wants a "tribal" tattoo that doesn't have anything to do with the muscle structure underneath it, but if it's drawn on the skin with sharpies to FIT the body, I can, and do, enjoy the hell outta that. It's about changing how people look nekkid, and who are you to say they're doing anything less important than someone getting a portrait of their dead brother?

      Get over it.
      • Hey Mac, it seems you're willing to write long soliloquies, but not to dialogue. I only say this because there've been two responses to your post here, and since then, you've posted another soliloquy in another thread.

        I'd love to hear an intelligent rebuttal for my (and others') comments.

        T
        • This isn't necessarily a rebuttal. Perhaps an exploratrion.......perhaps the tribal craze was born out of human need for tribalness....even in redneck types who would just as soon have barbedwire around their arms....and maybe do....but tacillay done without conscious intent......oh who fuckin knows.....any other hypothesis out there?

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