Interview with Tattoo Artist Hannah Mai

We chatted to 24-year-old Hannah Mai who works at Lucky Rabbit Tattoo Cult in Birmingham about her stylised tattoos, love for Disney and travel plans…

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How long have you been tattooing? I have been tattooing proffessionally now for two years but I started my apprenticeship three years ago.

What inspired you to become a tattooist? I wouldn’t say at a young age I was surrounded by tattoos as none of my family had tattoos, but my Grandad used to tell me about how his parents had them which initially fascinated me. His mother had a clover on the top of her arm that covered up an ex-partner’s name and his father had a mermaid that swam when he tensed his arm. I also used to draw doodles on my friends in primary school with gel pens. I can’t imagine that was particularly good for us but I found it too much fun!

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What did you do before? Art. Art has been my language since I can remember. It’s something that has never left my side. It’s the only thing I was decent at in school that I’d look forward to. I wasn’t fond of homework but when it came to art homework I’d practically be doing it as soon as I left the lesson. I have always loved the idea of creating artwork based on imagery taken from my childhood, and now I get to do this for a living!

As a young female you have great pressure by society and what the media tells you – that your value is in your appearance. I however am a firm believer that ‘as long as what I am creating is beautiful, so am I!’

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How would you describe your style? A lot of people have told me my style is quite vintage and slightly rag-doll like. I would agree with this. When I first started out I did mainly floral and animal work but I soon switched to doing what I had really aimed to do all along which was Disney. However I knew I didn’t want to just do carbon copy Disney. I wanted to bring something new to the industry a style that was recognisable as my own and I’d like to think I’m on the right path with this! So I’d describe my style as delicate stylised pastel Disney which I know is a bit of a mouthful!

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You tattoo mainly Disney tattoos, are you a Disney lover? I’ve always been obsessed with Disney it is one of my favourite things ever! It means so much to be in a position where I get to create this magic on fellow Disney obsessed lovers. My customers really keep me going I’m super thankful and I always look forward to having a week filled with Disney conversations with my customers.

Who is your favourite character and why? It’s so so hard to pick just one! I have a few. One would have to be Megaera from Disney Hercules. Her sass and independence taught me feminism from a young age. Another would be Judy hopps from Zootopia. I can super relate to her emotional ways and yet such strong positivity. If I was a Disney character I would like to think I’d be her.

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Do you have any Disney tattoos? Yes! And I’m planning more when I have the courage. I super suck at getting tattooed and I’m running out of the lesser painful areas to get covered! I have a Snow White and Prince Charming on the top of my arm done by Sarah Cooper and went back to get my second tattoo which was Marie from Aristocats on my thigh, but I’ve also had Disney work from Angharad Chappelle and Isobel Morton.

What would you love to tattoo? Ahh I have so many ideas! I’m always excited to do lesser known characters from Disney movies. The ones that seem to be a bit forgotten about. I’m dying to do any of the characters from the Disney Robin Hood or Princess and the Frog. I’m also a huge fan of the Don Bluth movies.

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Are you doing any guest spots or conventions? I have so many already planned to get through before the years out! I wouldn’t know where to start. The best thing to do would be to check my Instagram for all my dates!

Although I am in a Birmingham studio with my pals at Lucky Rabbit Tattoo Cult. I am mainly travelling this year. Recently I’ve been lucky enough to do Europe based guest spots as well which is great because it means I can cater to my European followers and soak in some culture at the same time!

NYC: Ladies Ladies Art Show

LLAS

Ladies, Ladies
International group art show featuring
more than 50 female artists from the tattoo world!

Sept 15th to Oct 7th, 2018
MF Gallery: 213 Bond St. Brooklyn, New York
(Opening Party Saturday September 15th, 7-10pm
)

Curated by Elzia Iannaccone Gezlev and Martina Secondo Russo

 

 

The event was born as a platform to show the diversity of art in the feminine universe of professional tattooing. The tattoo scene has been historically a male dominated playground, but in the last 30 years or so, the number of women in the tattooing industry has grown exponentially and like never before. Tattooing itself has gone from being a subculture practice to a widespread cultural/social phenomenon. As the number of people getting tattooed has grown, so has the massive presence of many talented women choosing tattooing as their professional career and their creative voice!

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Participating artists:
Cloditta, Kate Collins, Lara Scotton, Katya Krasnova, Elvia Guadian, Pat Sinatra, Virginia Elwood, Miss Juliet, Danielle Rose, Zoe Bean, Gill Gold, Anna Sandberg, Electric Martina, Debra Yarian, Kari Barba, Totemica, Denise de la Cerda, Sara Mae, Dorothy Lyczek, Jen Carmean, Itoyo, Olivia Olivier, Ol Ash, Cindy Stroemple
, Gaia Leone, Johanna Elvira
, Sara Purr, Karen Glass
, Drew Linden
, Valeria Marinaci, Holly Ellis
, Shannon Marie
, Brittany Bauza
, Claudia Ducalia
, Inma Alted
, Stina Sardinha
, Lady Bonsai
, Emma Griffiths
, Krista Cheri
, Sara Antoinette Martin
, Linn Aasne
, Anna Melo
, Magie Serpica
, Rose Whittaker
, Dawn Cooke
, Jemma Jones, Minka Sicklinger, Anem Illus, Erin Lavinia, Federica Ferrera, Margaux Ulrich, Jackie Dunn Smith, Blair Maxine Hewitt, Erica Flannes, Katie Gray, Holly Ashby, Miss Elvia and Martina Secondo Russo.

art by Gaia Leone for LLAS2018

Art by Gaia Leone

art by Dawn Cooke for LLAS2018

Art by Dawn Cooke

art by TOTEMICA for LLAS2018

Art by Totemica 

art by Katie Gray for LLAS2018

Art by Katie Gray

Charlie Wagner & Sam O’Reilly Flash Sheets Auctioned

Six original tattoo flash art sheets attributed to to two of America’s earliest tattoo artists, Charlie Wagner (1875-1953) and Sam O’Reilly (1854-1909), bring a combined sale of $41,375 at Ripley Auctions, USA on July 28th 2018. 

The six sheets were found in the bottom of a trunk in the attic of an 84-year-old career Marine Corps officer. The trunk had been in storage for over 40 years. It also held other rare items, including a 1584 hand-coloured map engraving of Tuscany, Italy, which was also in the auction.

Sam O’Reilly (1854-1909) learned tattooing in the Navy and patented the first tattooing machine in 1891. He practiced his art in New York City, in the Bowery. Charlie Wagner (1875-1953) was a tattoo artist for more than 50 years. He apprenticed with O’Reilly and patented his own tattoo machine in 1904. He sold tattoo machines and his own brand of ink. He also tattooed circus performers, sailors and “tattooed ladies” who became famous as circus side-show attractions.

The subject matter dated as far back as 1894 and included “Buffalo Bill” Cody, Gen. George Armstrong Custer, the Spanish-American War and the image of crossed guns, representative of Teddy Roosevelt’s Rough Riders, to name a few. One of the images included the date of 1908.

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Lot 153: Original tattoo flash sheet attributed to Charlie Wagner and Sam O’Reilly, two of America’s earliest tattoo artists ($4,750).

Lot 154

Lot 154: Original tattoo flash sheet attributed to Charlie Wagner and Sam O’Reilly, two of America’s earliest tattoo artists ($4,250).

Lot 155

Lot 155: Original tattoo flash sheet attributed to Charlie Wagner and Sam O’Reilly, two of America’s earliest tattoo artists ($5,500).

Lot 156

Lot 156: Original tattoo flash sheet attributed to Charlie Wagner and Sam O’Reilly, two of America’s earliest tattoo artists ($7,500).

Lot 157

Lot 157: Original tattoo flash sheet attributed to Charlie Wagner and Sam O’Reilly, two of America’s earliest tattoo artists ($8,125).

Lot 158

Lot 158: Original tattoo flash sheet attributed to Charlie Wagner and Sam O’Reilly, two of America’s earliest tattoo artists ($11,250).

The Black Hat Tattoo

Dublin reserves a warm welcome and a pint of Guinness to everyone who crosses the sea to discover the country. This multi-cultural, festive and friendly environment has seen Dublin become one of the best destinations for tattooing in Europe. You will find here no less than 200 tattoo studios and 2000 tattoo artists from diverse origins sharing the same passion of tattooing, all contributing to the development of the tattoo industry in Ireland.

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Thanks to them, the city is an open museum to modern art where street painting, music and tattooing contribute to the amazing spirit of Temple Bar. Dublin has became the home of some of the most talented tattoos artists in the world and as a group of artists we’re happy to be in this city.

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The Black Hat Tattoo was created in 2016 and the studio has built a strong collective of artists that belong together because they share the same values of what qualitative and professional tattooing needs to be. They are both artists and tattoo artists, and the collective has become one of the most popular tattoo parlours in Dublin.

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However, the tattoo shop didn’t get where they are simply because of the quality of their tattoo artists, body piercer and staff. But thanks to their customers who not only come from Dublin but travel from all over the world, bringing their ideas, good vibes, trust and support.

Thanks for supporting us when we started. Thanks for spreading the word year after year to your loved ones, friends and mates. Thanks for helping us to grow and to believe in what we believe.

Today The Black Hat Tattoo is one of the trendy places to visit when you reach the city as we keep a traditional atmosphere that you can experience everywhere in Dublin with the warm Irish welcome we are proud of.

This post has been sponsored by The Black Hat Tattoo. 

Michele Servadio on Art, Tattooing and GESTURES01

Throughout our lives, our interactions with different people, environments and experiences are what makes us who we are. Now, imagine if these inputs left a mark on the surface of the skin. That’s what tattoos are: reminders of what made you who you are. With the Body of Reverbs (B.O.R), I’m emphasising those moments.

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These are the words of Michele Servadio, a multi-disciplinary artist based in London and the creator of the Body of Reverbs (B.O.R), a contemporary ritual that uses the tattoo machine as a musical instrument, translating the vibrations of the needle on skin into a sound. Performed in front of a crowd, the tattoo itself is abstract and spontaneous. This is because it is the experience, the connection between body, sound and space that is central, not the result.

B.O.R was born out of the necessity to bring tattooing back to its archaic identity, at a time when it has become a mass consumed product. “The aim was to create a total art practice with tattooing at its centre”, explains Servadio.

Since its birth in 2014, B.O.R has launched New Rituals for Contemporary Bodies LP+ Book, featuring recordings of two performances from 2016 with Years of Denial and Hexn. The record will be launched on 7 September during GESTURES01, an evening of alternative performance art in The Old BathsHackney Wick and featuring guests such as Dahc Dermur VIII (Chadd Curry), Nick Tee, Matteo Vallicelli and Olivier de Sagazan. In anticipation of the launch, Mele Couvreur, a social development practitioner based in London, with a passion for art and ink, spoke briefly with Michele about the event, his views on art and tattooing and his desire to merge them both.

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The line-up of GESTURES01 is pretty impressive and includes a diverse mix of artists. Yet, all of them have something in common: the body and its transformation. Can you tell us a bit more about what’s behind that?

There isn’t really a specific message, it’s more about raising questions about the body, about identity, about personality, and who you can be. The event is intended as a celebration of the body, personality and subjectivity in a time of constant mutation.

That’s why we have this sort of line-up: from Olivier de Sagazan and his performance on stage, B.O.R. and body modification, to Chad who is a living product of this constant mutation. I see a strong connection between Olivier and Chad: We will start with Sagazan, who mutates his appearance with paint and clay, in the context of a stage, and in the span of a performance. Then we end up with Chad, who changes his appearance daily, but in the span of a life time.

I would say GESTURES01 is a celebration of changes.

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GESTURES01 puts tattooing next to other art forms such as painting, sculpture etc. Do you think this will happen more in the future and that tattooing in art will become more prominent? Yes, for sure. Tattoo is developing in unexpected ways. More and more people are coming into the culture from very different backgrounds. You can have a conceptual artist who starts tattooing just because he/she has a certain idea he wants to express. Or a graphic designer, a painter, a sculptor, a chef…

What is coming out of the tattoo world right now is coming from different realities. To me this is extremely interesting. It shows that there are different ways to deal with the body, many different ways to mark your body, and many reasons why you would do it. It’s bringing tattooing out from shops and into the galleries, venues, private spaces, and rural areas.

This is, to an extent, how we knew tattooing before, before the commercialisation. It brings tattooing back to what it once was. So I guess, putting tattooing next to painting and sculpture, is sort of making a little statement.

4What are the main differences for you between art and tattooing Tattooing is dealing with the most beautiful thing there is: the human body. You are creating something on a human body that will live only a little, considering the lifetime of an art work.

When you create a work of art, you probably also do it for different reasons. Art has always been a way to talk about the problem of our existence. Art is very religious in that way. It talks about our existence, our society and our subjectivity, and what is tattooing, if not that? It is a direct act from our subjectivity through our body. Tattoos are feedback directly on our society. I think in the end we are talking about the same things. That’s why I want to unify those things.

What I like about art is that it is very transversal. I like printmaking, photography. I like experimenting in a dark room with chemicals. I like painting and life drawing. Life drawing is one of my favourite things.

That’s academic in a way. It’s extremely classic. It is a drawing on paper and it is one of the most beautiful things. It is so simple and such a powerful tool of research. When you draw something on a piece paper, you are drawing something that you copy, but the way in which you copy that thing, is according to the way you perceive the world. So you are showing the world your perspective. As simple as that you can say plenty of things. When you apply this on a body, you sort of closing that circle I like to think.

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Why do you want to bring them together? I think it is a duty of an artist, of a young artist, to fill the gap when there is a lack of something in the culture that we live in. I perceived, and felt, a lack of spirituality in tattooing for example. I felt this gap between art and tattooing. Or the struggle of trying to understand tattoo, not just as a product, but as something deeper than that, as something non- professional.  Art is not professional. That doesn’t exist, a professional artist. Nor does a professional tattooer, but I don’t want to go too far…

Sticking to art, if you see what is lacking, then I believe it is your duty to fill that gap. To me, there is a big gap between art and tattooing, and I want to fill that gap and bring the two together. That is why I love tattooing the same subject on someone, and then doing a painting or a print of the same subject. They are all part of the same universe. But one is made to live on someone’s body, and one is made to live on paper and live forever.

B.O.R is that total art concept where you bring everything together. In a way, I’m trying to fill that gap by bringing tattooing back to its own spirituality. That is why we are connecting it with the power of sound, trance and pain.

Will there be a GESTURES02? I’d love to do that, at least once a year. I’m not an organizer, but I’d love to do it. I love the struggle. If I have the chance, yes, I’d totally do it.