Grit your teeth and get through the blizzard of new year weight loss crap
I've been farting around today and I made this stoopid thing as a gift to my fellow fat freaks who hate the onslaught of new year diet crap that spoils this time of year. Please circulate it far and wide. The oh-so-sensible voices of the lovely and slim brigade have started perniciously early this time around, with ads for vile Special K cereal diets on blimmin' Boxing Day, and endless bloody success stories doing the rounds already. Eurgh, I wish it would all sod off.
PS Thanks to Simon M, for telling me that Danger of Death and Falling Rocks are the funniest of the warning sign genre.
Vista Body Art
Vista Body Art Biography
We specialize in Black and Grey Tattoos, Portrait Tattoos, Color Tattoos, Traditional, Aztec, Asian, Wicked/Evil, Day of the dead, side rib Tattoos, we also do cover-ups. You think it and we Ink it. We do Back pieces, arm sleeves, Chest piece Tattoos etc. We also do Religious, Memorial Tattoos for the Love ones. Walk-ins are welcome but appointments are preferred. And remember Cheap Tattoos are not good and Good Tattoos are not cheap. So stop by and start your new tattoo ideas
We specialize in Black and Grey Tattoos, Portrait Tattoos, Color Tattoos, Traditional, Aztec, Asian, Wicked/Evil, Day of the dead, side rib Tattoos, we also do cover-ups. You think it and we Ink it. We do Back pieces, arm sleeves, Chest piece Tattoos etc. We also do Religious, Memorial Tattoos for the Love ones. Walk-ins are welcome but appointments are preferred. And remember Cheap Tattoos are not good and Good Tattoos are not cheap. So stop by and start your new tattoo ideas
Vista Body Art
Vista Body Art
Vista Body Art
Vista Body Art
Vista Body Art
Vista Body Art
Vista Body Art
Vista Body Art
Vista Body Art
Vista Body Art
Vista Body Art
Vista Body Art
Body Art History
Body Art History Biography
Tattooing and other practices understood broadly as ‘body arts’ (including but not limited to branding, scarification, piercing and even body painting and cosmetic surgery) have long been a source of popular and academic fascination, most usually discussed in anthropological, criminological, psychological or sociological contexts. Yet though the common phrase ‘body art’ used to describe tattooing and its coincident technologies is familiar and comprehensible, scholarly work which deals with the vernacular body arts using methodologies which are explicitly art-historical and art-theoretical has been all too infrequent.
This seminar presentations a diverse range of papers from scholars and practitioners, many of whom explicitly apply the critical approaches of art history and material culture studies to the body as an art object beyond a delineated artistic context, in reference to specific case studies and in the context of broader theoretical concerns. Speakers will address tattooing and other body arts and bodily practices, their practitioners, their practices and their products, and will consider, for example, questions of aesthetics, authorship, ownership, value and the status of the body as an artistic object; the applicability of artistic methodologies to the lived body; tattooing in performance art; and tattooing and other body-art imagery in historical contexts.
The session will also include a special screening of the short documentary Skin, which follows the heavily tattooed Geoff Ostling in his decision to donate his tattooed skin to the National Gallery of Australia on his death.Body Art History
Body Art History
Body Art History
Body Art History
Body Art History
Body Art History
Body Art History
Body Art History
Body Art History
Body Art History
Body Art History
Body Art History
Body Art Jewelry
Body Art Jewelry Biography
Body Art Jewelry debuted in 2001 with their first album Discovery. After less-than-stellar sales of the first album, two of the singers were replaced. A year later, their second album, Again, was released, with much better results. Full of strong R&B ballads (as opposed to the sexy dance songs that were popular at that time), the album quickly yielded two high-charting singles — "Again" and "Tonight" — which started the group's rise to popularity. This was quickly followed by their third album Beloved, which had a very cutesy theme. Their first single "니가 참 좋아" ("I Really Like You") was very poppy and had Jewelry adopt a cutesy concept to match the song, with colorful outfits and perky dances. The title track, Be My Love, was also promoted. Even though album sales for Again and Beloved were great, the group was unhappy with their current image, and did not want to be known for only their cute and innocent songs.
Body Art Jewelry debuted in 2001 with their first album Discovery. After less-than-stellar sales of the first album, two of the singers were replaced. A year later, their second album, Again, was released, with much better results. Full of strong R&B ballads (as opposed to the sexy dance songs that were popular at that time), the album quickly yielded two high-charting singles — "Again" and "Tonight" — which started the group's rise to popularity. This was quickly followed by their third album Beloved, which had a very cutesy theme. Their first single "니가 참 좋아" ("I Really Like You") was very poppy and had Jewelry adopt a cutesy concept to match the song, with colorful outfits and perky dances. The title track, Be My Love, was also promoted. Even though album sales for Again and Beloved were great, the group was unhappy with their current image, and did not want to be known for only their cute and innocent songs.
Body Art Jewelry
Body Art Jewelry
Body Art Jewelry
Body Art Jewelry
Body Art Jewelry
Body Art Jewelry
Body Art Jewelry
Body Art Jewelry
Body Art Jewelry
Body Art Jewelry
Body Art Jewelry
Body Art Video
Body Art Video Biography
A tattoo is a form of body modification, made by inserting indelible ink into the dermis layer of the skin to change the pigment. The first written reference to the word, "tattoo" (or Samoan "Tatau") appears in the journal of Joseph Banks, the naturalist aboard Captain Cook's ship the HMS Endeavour: "I shall now mention the way they mark themselves indelibly, each of them is so marked by their humor or disposition".
The word "tattoo" was brought to Europe by the explorer James Cook, when he returned in 1771 from his first voyage to Tahiti and New Zealand. In his narrative of the voyage, he refers to an operation called "tattaw". Before this it had been described as scarring, painting, or staining.[1]
Whole back tattoo, USA 2007
A trompe-l'œil spider tattoo
Tattooing has been practiced for centuries in many cultures, particularly in Asia, and spread throughout the world.[citation needed] The Ainu, an indigenous people of Japan, traditionally had facial tattoos. Today, one can find Atayal of Taiwan, Berbers of Tamazgha (North Africa), Hausa people of Northern Nigeria, Kurdish people in East-Turkey, and Māori of New Zealand with facial tattoos.[citation needed]
Tattooing was widespread among Polynesians and among certain tribal groups in Africa, Borneo, Cambodia, Europe, Japan, the Mentawai Islands, MesoAmerica, New Zealand, North America and South America, the Philippines, and Taiwan.[citation needed] Indeed, the island of Great Britain takes its name from tattooing; Britons translates as "people of the designs", and Picts, the peoples who originally inhabited the northern part of Britain, literally means "the painted people".[2] Despite some taboos surrounding tattooing, the practice continues to be popular in many parts of the world
A tattoo is a form of body modification, made by inserting indelible ink into the dermis layer of the skin to change the pigment. The first written reference to the word, "tattoo" (or Samoan "Tatau") appears in the journal of Joseph Banks, the naturalist aboard Captain Cook's ship the HMS Endeavour: "I shall now mention the way they mark themselves indelibly, each of them is so marked by their humor or disposition".
The word "tattoo" was brought to Europe by the explorer James Cook, when he returned in 1771 from his first voyage to Tahiti and New Zealand. In his narrative of the voyage, he refers to an operation called "tattaw". Before this it had been described as scarring, painting, or staining.[1]
Whole back tattoo, USA 2007
A trompe-l'œil spider tattoo
Tattooing has been practiced for centuries in many cultures, particularly in Asia, and spread throughout the world.[citation needed] The Ainu, an indigenous people of Japan, traditionally had facial tattoos. Today, one can find Atayal of Taiwan, Berbers of Tamazgha (North Africa), Hausa people of Northern Nigeria, Kurdish people in East-Turkey, and Māori of New Zealand with facial tattoos.[citation needed]
Tattooing was widespread among Polynesians and among certain tribal groups in Africa, Borneo, Cambodia, Europe, Japan, the Mentawai Islands, MesoAmerica, New Zealand, North America and South America, the Philippines, and Taiwan.[citation needed] Indeed, the island of Great Britain takes its name from tattooing; Britons translates as "people of the designs", and Picts, the peoples who originally inhabited the northern part of Britain, literally means "the painted people".[2] Despite some taboos surrounding tattooing, the practice continues to be popular in many parts of the world
Body Art Video
Body Art Video
Body Art Video
Body Art Video
Body Art Video
Body Art Video
Body Art Video
Body Art Video
Body Art Video
Body Art Video
Body Art Video
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