There is a tendency amongst those in the tattoo industry who've convinced themselves that what they do is more important than it really is. Sometimes this is a conscious philosophy, often its not- more of a pervasive attitude thats been allowed to seep into their behavior.
These 'artists' think they're doing something life-altering, that what they do has some form of world-defining weight.
This line of thought and action leads to a smug arrogance, and elitism. It's epidemic. All of you who've walked into a studio full of artists who behave this way have felt that condescension, that sense of "what makes you think you're good enough to get a tattoo from us?"
You can practically hear their internal monologue- "Move aside mere drop of water, let the Ocean pass."
What is most amusing about this is that the vast majority of these people are all doing the same thing. ALL of them, it's the same old-same old.... "old-school-with-a-twist", yet somehow they're convinced that what they're doing is somehow new, unique, and NOT just completely self-congratulatory onanism.
They're all scamming their drawings from each other as voraciously as possible, but standing on a soap-box about how much better they are than studios (like PennyBlack) that exist for the people, as well as the art... As though giving clients exactly what they want is a bad thing, but cloning each other is the be-all/end-all of existence.
So whats the point to all this? Simply this- We draw on people. That's it.
We don't save lives, we don't make a lasting global difference.
We draw pictures. On skin.
I am proud to be anti Art-Elite.
I know my place in the world, and I will never think that just because I'm allowed to place my art on other peoples skin that makes all others inferior to me.
Anti. Art. Elite.
"We don't save lives, we don't make a lasting global difference."
ReplyDeleteAhh, perhaps, but to many you will make a lasting personal difference, and isn't that better than making no difference at all?
...True enough, and I don't mean to belittle what we actually accomplish with our clients, but again- we draw on people. Nothing about what we do justifies arrogance, condescension, or inflated ego.
ReplyDeleteWhat fires my anger are people in this business who will literally turn away a client because what that person wants isn't "good enough" for the artist to do.
It seriously makes me stabby.