About this Event
This talk is part of a series entitled 'Out ot Sea', which will focus on the influence of oceans and their coasts, in relation to Britain and its global empire, on visual and architectural imagination and production.
Talk description
As an opening line for an article in a popular newspaper about tattoos, the suggestion that “tattoos are not just for sailors anymore” is a familiar one. Indeed, it often feels as if the same sentiment graces every article about tattooing in the mainstream press. Tattooing, we have been told again and again recently, is coming of age – finally coming out of the murky shadows of the deviant underworld to leave its mark on the most well heeled. Tattoos are now to be seen on catwalks, on trading floors and around the chicest tables.
The hacks who churn out these stories might be surprised to learn, then, that the popular media has been reporting the arrival of tattooing in high society for nearly one hundred and fifty years. Indeed, in 1926, Vanity Fair reported that “tattooing has passed from the savage to the sailor, from the sailor to the landsman, and is now to be found beneath many a tailored shirt”.
In this talk, Matt will discuss the longstanding intersections between tattooing and maritime [visual] cultures, but also consider why tattoos have been so indelibly associated with the sea, despite their continuous presence amongst urban populations in Europe and America for more than four centuries. Moreover, with attention to visual evidence, he will illustrate the relationships between handicrafts made on board ships and the persistent folk imagery of the Western tattoo tradition.
(This talk contains images of pathologically preserved human remains and discussions and depictions of sexual activity, including nudity).
Speaker biography
Matt Lodder is an art historian, curator, writer, podcaster and broadcaster. He is currently Senior Lecturer in Art History and Theory, and Director of American Studies at the University of Essex. His research primarily concerns the application of art-historical methods to history of Western tattooing from the seventeenth century to the present day, with a principal focus on the professional era from the 1880s onwards.
His first monograph, Painted People: Humanity in 21 Tattoos, was published in 2022. His next book, on the history of the Western tattoo industry will be released by Yale University Press in 2024. His latest major exhibition, British Tattoo Art Revealed, began at the National Maritime Museum Falmouth in March 2017 and toured the UK through to 2021.
Image caption: Caption: Hand-painted tattoo flash designs attributed to Alec Colville Gordon, c. 1914-18.
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
Paul Mellon Centre and online, 16 Bedford Square, London, United Kingdom
GBP 0.00