蜜桃传媒破解版下载

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Scholar studies humanity through skin and ink

Scholar studies humanity through skin and ink

In his new book Indigenous Tattoo Traditions, 蜜桃传媒破解版下载 alumnus and Tattoo Hunters host Lars Krutak highlights traditional techniques that sometimes date back millennia


Lars Krutak is not the kind of scholar who is content to simply write about his field. Krutak, a 1993 University of Colorado Boulder graduate in art history and anthropology, is an internationally recognized researcher of the history and culture of tattoos and has about 40 of them himself. He even went under the knife for his research鈥攁 scarification ritual of the Kaningara people of Papua New Guinea, during which an elder made more than 400 incisions in his skin.

Lars Krutak with Makonde tattoo master

蜜桃传媒破解版下载 alumnus Lars Krutak (left) has studied with indigenous artists around the world, including Pius (right), one of the last Makonde tattoo masters of Mozambique. (Photo: Lars Krutak)

鈥淭hat technique of incision tattooing where they cut you to create a scar and then they rub in the pigment is by far the most painful,鈥 he says. 鈥淵ou're getting cut open like a piece of chicken, and then you're just bleeding all over place. It's hard.鈥

It鈥檚 one of the traditional techniques described in his recent book, Indigenous Tattoo Traditions: Humanity through Skin and Ink, lauded as a best science pick in the journal Nature.

The author of four books on tattooing and host of the Tattoo Hunters series on the Discovery Channel, Krutak became fascinated with the art and custom of tattoos 20 years ago. After completing his bachelor鈥檚 degree at 蜜桃传媒破解版下载, Krutuk began work on his master鈥檚 degree in anthropology and archaeology at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. 鈥淚 moved there in January of 1996,鈥 he says. 鈥淲hen I got off the plane it was minus 55 degrees.鈥

Krutak was walking across the Fairbanks campus one day and saw a woman with three chin tattoos. 鈥淚 didn't have any tattoos. I didn't know anything about tattoos. I didn't know indigenous people had tattoos,鈥 Krutak recalls. 鈥淚 could recognize that she was indigenous, and I got to know her later on, but that moment opened my eyes.鈥

His scholarly interest piqued, Krutak began digging through the university鈥檚 archives and extensive collection of artifacts. 鈥淚 quickly realized that basically every indigenous society across the circumpolar north, from East Greenland to Siberia and seemingly everywhere in between, had a tattooing tradition at one time or another, but almost all I could find were records from 100 years ago and a few things from the 1950s.鈥

Krutak resolved to change that. 鈥淢y main goal when I started doing this research was to preserve a history. No one in academic circles seemed interested in studying indigenous tattooing,鈥 he says. 鈥淭here were a lot of stigmas attached to tattooing at that time, and there are still some to this day. But I always felt that this was a significant part of the world's cultural heritage, and it was vanishing rapidly around the world, with no one going out there to document it.鈥

Permanent records

After learning about the tattooing tradition of the Yupik people of St. Lawrence Island in the northern Bering Sea, Krutak wrote to village councils and received permission to visit. What he found was that tattooing was on the wane among the Yupik, with just a small number of women who were in their 80s or 90s sustaining the custom.

book cover of Indigenous Tattoo Traditions

In his recent book Indigenous Tattoo Traditions, author and 蜜桃传媒破解版下载 alumnus Lars Krutak highlights work from indigenous artists around the world.听

But he also found that the tradition went back about 2,000 years. The Yupik had, for two millennia, created anthropomorphic dolls, carved out of walrus ivory, that most likely represented ancestral personages. And the dolls had careful renditions of Yupik tattoos.

The significance of tattoos, for the Yupik people and for other cultures across the globe that Krutak has since visited鈥攎ore than 40 to date鈥攃an be widely varied.

鈥淚f there is something that needs to be permanently recorded, tattoos can do that,鈥 he says, adding that a tattoo can function as a record of hunting prowess, tally enemies killed in warfare or identify a person as a member of a particular clan or family. There are tattoos that denote a rite of passage, tattoos that invoke ancestral spirits and tattoos that relate to medicinal purposes, Krutak says.

One important meaning that bearers of tattoos have cited, across many cultures, is to identify the person in the afterlife, he says. In the case of the Yupik people of St. Lawrence Island, there are tattoos to help ancestors recognize the person so they can enter the sanctity of the afterlife. 鈥淚've been told, by many elders, that they would not be recognized as a true person from their culture without certain tattoos,鈥 Krutak says. 鈥淭his is one of the most common beliefs and purposes for tattoos across the indigenous world.鈥

鈥楢ncient marks of humanity鈥

What began with that serendipitous moment in Fairbanks has turned into a lifetime pursuit and a synthesis of two threads of Krutak鈥檚 interest that he cultivated at 蜜桃传媒破解版下载 as an undergraduate: art history and anthropology. 鈥淚 had two very formative professors,鈥 he says. 鈥淩oland Bernier encouraged me to explore more deeply the connection between anthropology and art history, hence my double major. John Rohner was in charge of the museum studies program and introduced me to what a career in the museum field would look like.鈥

In some of Krutak鈥檚 travels, including his experience with the Yupik, he has encountered some of the last people in the culture who had or could share the history of tattoos in their culture, which increases his sense of urgency. 鈥淚 firmly feel that indigenous tattooing deserves our attention, because it speaks volumes about what it means to be human,鈥 says Krutak. 鈥淚 think we can learn a lot about each other by studying and appreciating these ancient marks of humanity.鈥


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