Influencing the Landscape

August 22, 2008 at 9:58 pm (art, culture, environment, life, photography, scars, tattoos) (, , , , )

When I was in Cambridge, landscape photographer Alex Maclean was kind enough to take some time out and chat about his work and explore the concept that there is a relationship between scarring and tattooing the body and scarring and tattooing the earth. We ended up getting waylaid by trying to define what differentiates an earth scar from an earth tattoo? We decided that when speaking about the earth, one is permanent, and one is not. I’ll let you guess which is which. Meanwhile…a few of Alex’s photographs

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Street Art Tattoo?

August 22, 2008 at 6:07 am (art, culture, story, tattoos) (, , , )

So since we are on the subject of Michael…he does street art where he uses wheat paste to glue his photographs onto walls, trucks, and other abandoned or forgotten places. I asked if he thought of this as a tattoo, and how he defined how he left his mark?

His response…” I Love how temporary the work is. Tattoos are so final, so strict, so set in their ways. The work is (hopefully) all about change.”

I like things that are about change.

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I Yam what I Yam

August 22, 2008 at 5:55 am (art, bisexual, culture, life, story, tattoos, transformation) (, , , , , , )

Michael is a beloved friend, a talented photographer… and someone who actually enjoys the experience of waiting in lines. Among other things… he initiated a very cool project 7:15.

“I got my first tattoo (not this one) because I felt that I would seem tougher and it would work as armor against the years I was called a fag, or queer, gay, or nature-boy. In a way it worked — despite the fact that I’m still a pretty girlie bisexual and that no one really sees it. As for the second one, I got it when I decided that I would dedicate my life to being an artist (it’s an “art history” tattoo– actually both are– the one pictured is a woodcut by Karl Schmidt-Rottluff and was included in Hitler’s degenerate art exhibit of 1937, the other is a line drawing of Mime Van Osen (a faggy looking guy himself) by Egon Schiele).

It sounds hokey but I’m sure some of your readers can commiserate that when you grow up in a suburb of DC, the son of a pragmatic federal employee, choosing a life of artistic uncertainty seems risky beyond belief. I got the tattoo as a testament to who I was at that point in my life, and I wanted it to act as a reminder for my future self.

The great thing is I’m not too different from the 22 year old who got that tattoo (I’m 35 now). The biggest difference is that now I trust my instincts and decisions much more than I did 13 years ago.

As for living with it, there are times I wish I didn’t have it and I look at the clean armed with a certain envy. But then again, I am someone who has always simultaneously loved and hated garnering attention for my appearance. I yam what I yam.”

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This is who I am..forever

August 21, 2008 at 6:57 am (art, culture, life, scars, story, transformation) (, , , , , )

I went to high school with Noah! It was a treat to hang out with Noah when I was in Richmond, and he was kind enough to play hooky and hang out with me when I ran around getting interviews of other folks you will meet soon. He is a talented artist, graphic designer, and activist. His most recent project is Skull-A-Day… absolutely worth checking out, as well as his home grown socially conscious graphic design and consulting company Another Limited Rebellion. Noah taught me something, and I’m not sure I ever thanked him for it…the power of saying “we” when pitching new ideas.

“Knuckle tattoos are very specific in our culture. Who has knuckle tattoos? Serious hard-core punk rock folks…there is a choice being made when you get knuckle tattoos to very specifically remove yourself from a certain segment of society. You will never be a banker. Well…probably…never be a banker. The world is changing.

These tattoos were a 30th birthday present to myself. 30 is a charged year for people. I like to turn those kinds of things on it’s head because I think it’s a load of crap, but at the same time I think it’s hard not to have a response to it. I found a mug when I turned 30 that said, “30…over the hill.” And I think 30 was over the hill…a long time ago. Now..it’s nothing. I think people don’t realize until they are in their 30, that it’s young. But when you’re younger…life ends when your 30…because that means you are going to be old. Which is funny because that means that you’ve got from 21-30 to have all your good times… apparently.

So for me then 30 is when you are a grown up. So I got mine at 30 as a way of saying…this is it…this is who I am…forever.

I had been thinking about it for a long time. There is something really gratifying about tattoos that are always seen, and there is no avoiding it. That was important to me. I wanted something that was going to stand out in that way.

I had already gotten most of my tattoos by the time I decided to get my knuckles done …but really had an urge..I had to get them…and I needed to find something that fit the 8 spaces you have to fill.

I had already gotten most of my tattoos by the time I decided to get my knuckles done …but really had an urge…I had to get them…and I needed to find something that fit the 8 spaces you have to fill.
One day I was in a store and I saw someone had a tattoo of the I Ching on their arm. Taoism is very important philosophy to me and is very essential to my spirituality. For a while I used the I Ching as a tool for learning more about myself. I stopped eventually, I didn’t want to know about the future anymore, I was totally satisfied with the now, and I didn’t care to get that advice anymore. But I really loved what it was about, that all of the elements in the universe are interconnected. And that everything affects everything else. So how you throw these coins and sticks and how you divine the I Ching is because of how it is all connected. That really resonated with me.
So these are the 8 trigrams that are the 8 central components to the I Ching.

Because I work on the computer all day, every two key strokes… is a hexagram. So I am constantly making my future, my world, through the work that I do.
What’s interesting is that it has not gotten a dramatic response. Most people don’t comment on them. I think they feel like they are being polite by not saying something. The people that do…is the little only lady who says, “That’s so nice.”
And I think, really? OK. Wow.

I have hard time explaining them to people because it is too complicated. I’ll say, “Those are the Trigrams of the I Ching”. And there are three words that people don’t know. And then I say it is an ancient divination system, using more words that people don’t understand.

The funniest response I got was from some punk rock people who felt like they were odd in that I hadn’t done them in the right order. Normally you get all these tattoos down your arm, and you have filed up your body. And then, all that is left is your knuckles. You have already committed to the body suit of tattoos, and this is the last frontier. But the last frontier is here already. This is what I want now. And boy did that satisfy me, I got them, and you know that urge I told you I had? Well I am done with that for a while. This is really there. These aren’t these hidden-underneath-my-shirt-underneath-my-pants thing that a lot of tattoos end up being.
I don’t want to cover them up.
This IS me.

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Conquering The Demon

August 19, 2008 at 4:24 am (culture, life, story, tattoos, transformation) (, , , , , , , , )

Anastasia is a talented producer, confidant, and dear friend. She is also the first person who gave me her story. It is one of my favorites. I believe and trust in the symbolism, and the ability for this kind transformation and change to happen in this life.

“My crazy extra boyfriend turned semi stalker offered to get me a tattoo for my birthday. So we went to a place on Sunset called the Purple Panther Tattoo Shop. I was looking at the book trying to figure out what I wanted.

I had been struggling with a demon of mine. I was miserable because I was broke and I wanted all of these things… cars and clothes…and trips…and jewelry… and money…food…sex… I just wanted…all of these things, and all at once. I was drowning in it.

I wanted to stop wanting things, and I saw this character in the book (desire) and I thought to myself, if I put it on my body, I can conquer this demon.

People see it, and they think oh..it’s right by her bikini line, and it’s desire, and then it becomes about sex. I guess sex is a part of it, but it’s a very small part of it. Which is why, when I tell people what it means, I don’t usually say the word desire. I tell them it means “wanting”.

I actually think it worked. I believed in it’s power to help me conqueur the demon, and it did.”

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What is this blog about?

August 12, 2008 at 2:52 pm (art, culture, life, scars, story, tattoos, transformation) (, , , , , , , , , )

Many people spend their lives skimming the surface. It’s habitual: chatting, exchanging pleasantries, repeating the patterns of the day, and yet many of us are also desiring of the meaningful interactions, the deeper connections, the experiences and adventures that leave you with a story to tell. We are cut from the fabric of our parents, our hometowns, our initial experiences. But throughout our lives we sew those pieces together, and it is in the redesign, redirect, reallign, of our lives, and how we choose to tell the story of our lives… that is what weaves our creation myth.

This blog is designed to scratch the surface in order to explore the things that have left a mark, perhaps accidentally, perhaps on purpose. It explores the stories we tell, how we share them, who we tell them to, and how we live and die with them. I believe in the power of story telling. That when one person’s truth is told, than universal truths are discovered that cross race, religion, and age.

This blog, hopefully with your help, is also designed to explore if their is a relationship between how we tattoo and scar our bodies, and how we are tattooing and scarring the planet.

I find the submissions through people I know, people I meet, people I pursue, and hopefully…you. So please, scratch the surface, tell me what lies beneath.

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Identifying Marks

August 10, 2008 at 2:45 pm (culture, life, scars, story, transformation) (, , , , , , )

Greg is the first person to submit his own story in his own words. He is a talented poet, teacher, and senior editor of Blackbird. He also knows of the some of the best swimming holes to be found in Virginia!

“When I was a small boy I lived in the big city of St. Louis, not far from the shadows of the Anheuser Busch brewery where my father worked as an office boy, delivering mail and running errands. It was the 1950’s, my parents were young and poor, and we lived in a one-bedroom shotgun apartment on a street lined with tall, white-trunked sycamores, still one of my favorite trees. I slept on a small bed that was tucked into the area beneath the stairs leading up to the apartment on the second floor. Like Harry Potter, yeah—him with his famous scar.

One day when I was almost five years old (and pretending to be older), I was out playing with some of my scruffy friends—they were old enough to be in kindergarten and first grade—and we took our usual shortcut through a vacant lot down at the end of our block, a quick way to get to the back alley. Someone had been burning tree limbs and leaves there among the patchy grass and rocky dirt, and had piled it all right on the path that we always took at a run through that lot. That day we paused to look at the ashes and a few still-unburned limbs and logs that were lying there, grey and strange, poking around in them, not realizing that those ashes were concealing still-live embers of the fire. I was a curious and tough little boy, always getting into everything, always wearing out the seat of my pants playing and sliding around on the concrete and in the dirt. As I stood there looking at the ashes, the pants leg of my brand-new Sears Roebuck heavy-duty jeans, which I was wearing for the very first time, caught on fire. Later, my parents would carefully school me in the idea of dropping and rolling to put out such a fire, but at that time I didn’t know what else to do other than what I did, which was to run, screaming that I was on fire. Running with your clothes on fire—the worst thing you can do.

I’ll pause here to say that, even though I was unaware of it at that time, I was an adopted child, and this story may perhaps answer some questions some of you may have about that—or about what it means to be a mother. My mother, an attractive young blond-haired woman named Barbara, the woman who had adopted me, was in the kitchen, ironing in the summer heat with the back door open. When she heard my screams from nearly a block away, she tore out the back door, ran up some stairs to the back yard, leapt over the back fence and came running down the alley towards me. When she saw my pants leg on fire, she took hold of the jeans at my waist and in a single powerful motion she ripped those jeans right off my body and tossed them aside, like some sort of superhero. She grabbed me up in her arms and carried me up the street in my underwear, and both of us remembered later that one of the neighbor women was standing there looking over the back fence, clucking her tongue at a boy appearing in the alley in such a state of undress. My mother took me home and bandaged my badly burned leg, asking me the whole time, what did I think I was doing, walking through the live embers of a still-burning fire? Later, when she pulled the bandage away, it came off with a big chunk of flesh, shocking us both. That area on my leg still has no feeling whatsoever today.

Back in those days before DNA identification, an important way to identify criminals and missing persons (and lost boys) were “identifying marks”—and one of mine is that scar on my leg. If I’m ever in a plane crash or train wreck, that’s one way my body could be identified, and I used to think about that some times. Even now, when I run my fingers over the scar that has no feeling, now with both of my parents dead and gone, I think about all that it tells me about myself, and I’m glad to have it, a mark of identity.

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Scaring and Tattooing the landscape

August 8, 2008 at 1:56 pm (art, culture, environment, life, scars) (, , , , , )

I was completely enamored with Virginia. The gentleness of warm summer nights. The sense of abundance that comes when every alley way, backyard, and side road is bursting with some green thing. The land is rich and fertile, and at moments I feared if I stayed too long in one spot, the Kudzu and Virginia Creeper would grow right over me. I was also more than impressed by how much the city is growing; the downtown transformed from abandoned and desolate to booming and busy. My favorite comment was made by a friend while walking down Broad Street during the art walk. “There are even white people on the street.” Yes, things are changing in downtown RVA. Meanwhile, I had a few opportunities to explore some tattooing and scarring of the landscape. A trip to Maymont, one of my favorite parks on the planet, provided an opportunity for the first exploration of this concept. I got a kick out of how this picturesque view had an additional point of view.

I fell in love with this tree the second I saw it, but then a closer look proved that it would be the prefect way to initiate the discussion about scarring of the earth.

Meanwhile, a bit of exciting news, I have received three submissions for stories, (I confess, I made requests for each of them…) but more stories are on their way,

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Busy in RVA

August 6, 2008 at 12:25 am (scars) (, )

There are so many scars and tattoos in Richmond, VA! Today I ran around town interviewing Noah Scalin, Dave Brockie, and Jack of JackGoesForth. I am looking forward to posting their stories, and am posting the pictures on Flickr this evening.

Meanwhile, I recently learned of a new kind of scar. It is a form of branding used in African American Fraternities. I am fascinated, and would love to hear the story of someone who has this kind of scarring.

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I’m a fat head

August 3, 2008 at 5:24 pm (culture, life, scars, story, transformation) (, , , , )

I met Mary a few years ago through friends of friends. She is close to people I hold dear to me, and is a straight talking true southern spit fire. After the story you see below, she told us about another scar she got when she was five while playing, “cocktails” . A true southern belle.

“This scar is from a brain tumor.

The best kind of brain tumor you can have if you’re going to have a brain tumor. They took a circular saw and cut out part of my scull and peeled back the skin in order to remove the tumor. The tumor was growing out of my acoustic nerve, so they had to cut it during surgery. So now I am deaf in my left ear. Speaking of doctors that you hate (referencing Nathan’s comment below), my doctor told me, “Well, since you have such a major hearing loss anyhow, you won’t miss it.” (I had 20% hearing loss before the surgery). But I do miss it. I really miss it.

To fill where the tumor was, they took fat out of my stomach. It was the size of a golf ball. I’m not happy about the divot, but I’m glad not to have the tumor anymore.

I can’t tell what the scar from my surgery looks like because it is not in my line of vision. But the divot in my stomach reminds me of the brain surgery all of the time. It makes me think I’m a fat head. That was an insult my father used to use all the time…and now it has become literal.

The scars are the map that help me remember the major events that have occurred in my life. “

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