| Now, not only socially acceptable,
but hip and desirable, tattoos have had a long history. From the
marks on a recently discovered man from 3300BC found in the ice
in the Alps, to wall paintings and mummies in Egypt from 2000BC,
to more mummies from that era, but in Pazyryk, Russia, it is obvious
that tattoo usage is long and widely spread.
The word “tattoo” is derived from Polynesian “tatao”,
meaning “to tap”, and/or Tahitian “tatau”,
which means to “mark something”. The first known English
usage was in the 1769 diary of Captain James Cook on a voyage to
the Marquesas Islands, from which sailors brought back the word
and tattoos to Europe, and began the long association of sailors
and tattoos.
Tattoos have performed many functions in the past, as well as the
present. As indicators of cultural identity they prove affiliation
with religions, ethnic groups, and even gangs. Status or rank can
also be connoted. Ritual links to the myth of the hero are strengthened,
especially when tattoos are used in rites of passage, or acts of
transition. In animist societies, they are often considered as identification
for entry to the afterlife, or spirit world. When combined with
magical powers, they have a talismanic function for protection from
evil or harm, and as a charm or love attraction. And last, they
are a form of individualistic expression, providing decorative enhancement
of the body.
We are especially attracted to the almost ‘naïve’,
traditional designs used in Thailand, Burma, Cambodia and Laos for
the purpose of invulnerability in the face of evil, and attraction
in matters of love and money. These often employ a combination of
magic diagrams (‘yantra’) with letters or numbers
symbolizing special incantations, images of mythical creatures,
or real creatures imbued with special powers. Additionally, these
designs are given more power with added lines of Pali text in Thai,
Lan Na or Khmer script.
The images included here were taken at a recent 'Wan Wai Kru',
or Day of Respect for the Master ('teacher', or 'guru'), taken at
the home/studio of tattoo master Ajan Innsom Siriwong, outside of
Chiang Mai. On this day, once a year, those who have received tattoos
from him return for his blessings and to 'recharge' the magic power
of their images, and to get new ones. We saw the physical transformations
of several whose tattoos had 'possessed' them, and they became tigers,
or other powerful creatures. Please see our blog
for May 2007 for more information and photos.
|