A smiling Charlotte taken by Ned Pratt. |
I first met Charlotte at the Second Cup at the Avalon
Mall where she was working at the time. When she reached forward to
serve me I noticed the tattoo on her forearm. It was of Alice and Wonderland and the style was early
Victorian, without colour. The
simple ink of the tattoo was a perfect fit for the etched print. In response to my compliment she
explained that her tattoo was based on the illustrations for the first edition
of the book. I was completely
charmed. The majority of tattoos
that I see on women are of flowers:
bunches of lilies, bouquets of roses. And the best thing I can say about them is that they are
inoffensive. I just hope their
owners have more personality than the tattoos. Charlotte and her tattoos were in joyful contrast and I knew
I wanted to interview her.
Charlotte got her first tattoo when she was 15 and in the
company of her mother who got a matching tattoo. And yes, it was a rose. The days when a daughter's date with mom was for a manicure
have been replaced with a trip to the tattoo artist. But most shops are pretty rigorous about observing a
"legal age" limit and strictly avoid tattooing minors. I would have to wait until the photo
shoot with Ned Pratt to see "the rose" as it was in between her hip
and lower back. But I tell you it
was no tramp stamp! Charlotte had
the rose transformed into a vivid sugar skull, as the motif associated with the
Mexican Day of the Dead is known.
The skull now features two roses, one in each eye socket and a diamond
on its forehead. The red rose had
gone from floral cliché to a ruby red focal point that was ideal for the
festive Latin aesthetic. It was an
instance of a good idea by a savvy client executed with style and skill, taken
that one step further by a tattoo artist.
And no surprise, it was Dave Munro.
A peacock tattoo is revealed as is another facet of Charlotte's personality. Photo credit: Ned Pratt |
You would be hard pressed to find two more contrasting
styles than the understated polite lyricism of the Alice in Wonderland
illustrations and the vibrant, folk imagery of the sugar skull. Think Brahms on one hand and Mariachis
on the other. Throw in a
Technicolor peacock ("just because it's pretty") on her thigh and a
Bible quote–"the greatest of these is love" in classic script below her
collar bone and you begin to get an idea of how complex a character Charlotte
is. She is a manager at Sears, avid reader
and a burlesque dancer to scratch the surface. At first I exclaimed to her that the tattoos looked like a
study in controlled schizophrenia.
Later, I came to realize that they were complementary facets of a
multidimensional-character more akin to the twists and turns of a good plot in
a novel. The other way to regard
the tattoos is that they mark different points in her personal timeline, the
progressive spiral of her biography.
Life rarely travels in a straight line.
In short, Charlotte is not a conventional person. Why should her tattoos be conventional
–especially when considered together?
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