Hey tat lovers.
I've located what appears to be the great Shinji Horizakura'studio in New York. Check out this website, with examples of his and other extremely talented people's work and have your mind blown away, then check out the videos further down in this blog concerning his work and have your mind blown away again. I wonder what the waiting list must be.
Shinji Horizakura
Showing posts with label irezumi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label irezumi. Show all posts
9/20/2007
Ukiyo inspiration
Here is a video on Ukiyo artwork. I hope people looking for an irezumi might be inspired by it. If not, just look at the pretty pictures!
9/18/2007
Tattoos and criminality
There may be a couple of reasons why Tebori and Yakuza are so closely related. In the mid-1800’s, Japan entered a phase of opening up to the world after years of isolation. The government at the time outlawed tattooing to “clean up” Japan’s image.
Why this would clean up their image is neither here or there, although if you ask me, it might have been because tattoos were associated with criminals, sailors and the poor classes in the West and Japan wanted to make a good impression to the new business partners. This meant that anyone with a tattoo was automatically an outlaw. The Yakuza, never being the ones to care about what society thought, made it their point to wear tattoos proudly, hence the association.
Another reason could be that tattoos were placed on slaves around 300AD, as a form of identification (as many other cultures did at the time). Hence, the association was made that people with tattoos=filth. I’ve read somewhere that the Yakuza are one of the few institutions in Japan that make no distinctions in class, color, gender, or ethnicity and frequently take in runaways and people who wouldn’t be given the time of day by anyone else. It’s not much of a stretch to imagine that Yakuza ranks at some point or other included people tattooed as punishment. Having a tattoo wasn’t stigma to them and, being the flamboyant characters they are, they might have adopted it as their “call card”. It’s funny then that many Yakuza members avoid getting tattooed to avoid recognition.
Why this would clean up their image is neither here or there, although if you ask me, it might have been because tattoos were associated with criminals, sailors and the poor classes in the West and Japan wanted to make a good impression to the new business partners. This meant that anyone with a tattoo was automatically an outlaw. The Yakuza, never being the ones to care about what society thought, made it their point to wear tattoos proudly, hence the association.
Another reason could be that tattoos were placed on slaves around 300AD, as a form of identification (as many other cultures did at the time). Hence, the association was made that people with tattoos=filth. I’ve read somewhere that the Yakuza are one of the few institutions in Japan that make no distinctions in class, color, gender, or ethnicity and frequently take in runaways and people who wouldn’t be given the time of day by anyone else. It’s not much of a stretch to imagine that Yakuza ranks at some point or other included people tattooed as punishment. Having a tattoo wasn’t stigma to them and, being the flamboyant characters they are, they might have adopted it as their “call card”. It’s funny then that many Yakuza members avoid getting tattooed to avoid recognition.
Oh, it will hurt
Anyone with an ink-job out there knows that, depending on the spot, it hurts like hell. And that’s with electrical guns that go in and out of the skin so fast, they vibrate. Yakuza, on the other hand, do it the old way, that is, hand-poked (Tebori).
Not for the squeamish, this is hardcore needle-poking!
A couple of videos on Shinji Horizakura, a true master of Tebori.
Apparently, it hurts like nothing else, but the results worth it. A full body tat may take anywhere between 1 to 5 years, if the artist works on it on a weekly basis, and can easily cost over $30k. Finding a decent artist is surprisingly difficult, as they are a secretive bunch, and you’d have to rely on word-of-mouth. Talking about dedication.
Not for the squeamish, this is hardcore needle-poking!
A couple of videos on Shinji Horizakura, a true master of Tebori.
Apparently, it hurts like nothing else, but the results worth it. A full body tat may take anywhere between 1 to 5 years, if the artist works on it on a weekly basis, and can easily cost over $30k. Finding a decent artist is surprisingly difficult, as they are a secretive bunch, and you’d have to rely on word-of-mouth. Talking about dedication.
Let’s talk about tats

As the tattoo stigma wears off in Japan, especially Tokyo, more and more people start getting them, so the above restriction becomes more and more difficult to get enforced. However, don’t count on being allowed into a sento if you have a dragon ink-job or anything that’s bigger than a kanji or gaijin. It definitely isn’t cool, as I hear that public baths in Japan are a big deal, socially-speaking. Yakuza tats are typically very elegant and of a very particular style called Irezumi, so I’m wondering if they’d still refuse entrance to someone like me who has very Western ink-jobs, full of hard angles and European themes (FYI, I got sailor stars and a big chaos star on my back, sooooo not Yakuza). Anyone having any such experience, give us a shout, eh?
Another event where Yakuza would show off tats, would be in religious ceremonies. Check this video out
Yakuza are very community-oriented and can always be found in any Matsuri (progression).
Intro, Yakuza-style
Hey everyone and mushi mushi.
This blog’s purpose is to explore the uniqueness of Yakuza tattoos. All three of us who contribute to this blog are tattoo fanatics, as well as multimedia designers, so our curiosity is more than academic, it’s downright personal. We are attracted and fascinated by the ceremonial nature that tattoos have for the Yakuza inner circle, where tattoos are not only a personal statement, but a way of defining ones self, as well as their beauty. We hope to gather some info on them here and give those who are interested a platform to add their own stories and knowledge.
We hope you enjoy this as much as we do.
-Yuhao, Vangelis, Zhaoge
This blog’s purpose is to explore the uniqueness of Yakuza tattoos. All three of us who contribute to this blog are tattoo fanatics, as well as multimedia designers, so our curiosity is more than academic, it’s downright personal. We are attracted and fascinated by the ceremonial nature that tattoos have for the Yakuza inner circle, where tattoos are not only a personal statement, but a way of defining ones self, as well as their beauty. We hope to gather some info on them here and give those who are interested a platform to add their own stories and knowledge.
We hope you enjoy this as much as we do.
-Yuhao, Vangelis, Zhaoge
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