ClaraB
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 258
- Location
- Topsail Island, NC
Recently I have been considering getting another tattoo and ran into this while looking for inspiration:
Artoria toured the country for more than fifty years as a sideshow attraction of many carnivals and circuses including Barnum and Bailey during the depression. Anna was like living art gallery, her tattoos consisted of beautiful, full color reproductions of fine art all carefully done by her husband. Anna's ink transformed her life from ordinary to extraordinary and allowed her to see the country and earn a better living than what she and her husband would have otherwise been capable of.
Here is Anna's husband, Red, tattooing a young lady's thigh. Apparently after social security numbers were issued they became a popular tattoo choice.
So now in light of these few snippets of historical information, Tattooed Ladies of the Lounge step forward, proudly bare your ink for all to see and claim your colorful tattoo heritage!
I realize that there are already several tattoo threads in the lounge but I was hoping that this would be a place where we could display and be proud of our ink without judgement or the stigma of tattoos in both the past we adore or present in which we live. Certainly tattooed ladies are no longer side show attractions but a tattoo still has the power to transform ordinary to extraordinary.
"Ladies and gentlemen, while you have been in this tent, you have seen numerous strange people, if you will, human oddities, freaks of nature, people who were born in strange conditions. But behind this curtain we have probably the strangest of them all-far stranger than anything we have seen out here on stage, because, back here we have this human oddity, who is not born a freak, she wasn't born strange, this woman is a man-made monstrosity. She was a young woman, very beautiful. She met and married a man three times older than herself. He was so jealous of her and afraid the she would be attracted to some other man that he marked her body, thinking that by marking her from head to toe, she would not longer be attractive to any other man. A she is here, no longer a young woman, but now a very elderly, widowed lady. But those marks the he put on her body when she was young are still there and they will be there for the remainder of her life. She is waiting on the stage now to welcome you."
This fictitious tale of the life of the "Tattooed Lady," Anna "Artoria" Gibbons served as her introduction in the sideshow tent. Anna later remarked that she was offended at being called a monstrosity.
Artoria toured the country for more than fifty years as a sideshow attraction of many carnivals and circuses including Barnum and Bailey during the depression. Anna was like living art gallery, her tattoos consisted of beautiful, full color reproductions of fine art all carefully done by her husband. Anna's ink transformed her life from ordinary to extraordinary and allowed her to see the country and earn a better living than what she and her husband would have otherwise been capable of.
Here is Anna's husband, Red, tattooing a young lady's thigh. Apparently after social security numbers were issued they became a popular tattoo choice.
So now in light of these few snippets of historical information, Tattooed Ladies of the Lounge step forward, proudly bare your ink for all to see and claim your colorful tattoo heritage!
I realize that there are already several tattoo threads in the lounge but I was hoping that this would be a place where we could display and be proud of our ink without judgement or the stigma of tattoos in both the past we adore or present in which we live. Certainly tattooed ladies are no longer side show attractions but a tattoo still has the power to transform ordinary to extraordinary.