Sunday, January 15, 2017

Old Art, New Tattoo

It has been over five years since my last tattoo. My upper arms, and one small part of my left forearm, as well as most of my back, are inked. Over the past months I'd been feeling a desire to have a larger piece done on my right forearm. I like timeless tattoos - nothing contemporary or related to pop culture in any way. No bright colors. I hesitate to use the term "tribal" but that is the best general description for the style of art that I prefer.

On my back I have a listing of numbers which represent the birthdates of close family members. I have a mandorla, a stick bird from a centuries-old Sami drum, and the names of my older kids written out in the Cherokee syllabary. Both of my upper arms are covered in black bands that I designed based on the tradition of Indonesian women tattooing their hands, arms, and shoulders, often connected to major life events (I got these after my husband and I married - and he had Celtic crosses done on his forearms for the same reason!). On my upper left forearm I have my son Gabriel's name written in Hebrew.
For my new tattoo I wanted to represent Germanic mythology in some form. I knew that I wanted something connected to Odin, but I also knew that I didn't want something typical (aka no Odin with ravens and wolves, no valknut - though I love those symbols) and I also didn't want anything contemporary in style. There are some beautiful reinterpretations of ancient art, but I didn't want that either. I started examining runestones and on the Stora Hammars III runestone I saw an image of Odin in eagle form next to Gunnlöð who bears a drinking horn filled with the mead of poetry. I love this story. I also love Odin depicted in his eagle shape. I love the image of the "maiden and the mead." Its shape would fit well on my arm. I sat with the idea for a few days. I looked at more potential images. Finally I decided to pull a rune around it, and I drew Sowilo from my pouch. Okay then! This would be the one.

At the tattoo shop, they offered to redraw the image, to make it more symmetrical. I told them that I really wanted the original work, with no significant alterations. They warned me that people might not be able to figure it out. I thought: as long as it looks accurate, that's what matters.
In the end, they were happy to give me what I wanted, and I was happy with the work they did. I suspect that this will end up as one part of a larger sleeve that will bear more Germanic art, possibly from the same runestone series.

Not all of my tattoos are "pretty" or objectively appealing pieces. In fact perhaps none of them are. I remember that after getting my upper arm tattoos, someone asked me if they were just outlines of something more I was planning to do - and was surprised when I said, "No." Yesterday as we were driving back home from the shop, I reflected on that, and if I cared. On one hand it's nice to show off a piece (which you only get because it matters to you) and have others comment on how lovely it is. But my tattoos are ultimately for me. When I receive a tattoo, I feel like I'm tapping into some primal essence, into ancient history, into the annals of human experience. I invite all of that history to become a part of me. I am happy to bear the work of an unknown artisan from the 700s, in all of its asymmetrical glory. An indigenous craftswoman once told me that the best work is never "perfect." I agree!

6 comments:

  1. Love hearing your process around this, Olivia. You describe them as one might describe prayer or meditation, a private and intimate relationship with something larger than oneself. That your tattoos may not be 'pretty' or even recognizable to anyone but yourself makes them all the more potent. That said, I love the...pithiness of your most recent one, the nuances obvious only to those with the eyes and heart to see.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks for your beautiful words, Rose- I hadn't thought of it as a prayer before but that is very much what it feels like. <3

      Delete
  2. Tattoos are extremely personal, whether forethought and planning was given to them, or not. Rose is right, I love the almost sacred process behind your tattoos. Thank you for sharing.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks, Alaina :) They really are personal! For a long time I would cover my arms even in mid summer because I felt a bit embarrassed- not of the art but of questions. You know people will often ask what a tattoo is, or what it represents. Which sometimes feels like a stranger asking to read your journal! I felt like I had to come up with an elevator speech. I'm much more relaxed about it now, fortunately!!

      Delete
  3. I love how you've become a living work of art over the years and I envy your courage to decorate your body in such a meaningful way!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks, Ellen! Ha, I'd never thought about it as courageous, but that's probably because I forget how much it hurts between tattoos!!!!! I have to admit that this time around, even after so many other tattoos, my eyes were as big as dinner plates when the artist started applying the ink!

      Delete