This informed and accessible book explores the wide-ranging history of
body art, from its expression of tribal affinities and cultural identity
to its role in theatricality, criminality, and beautifying the body, as
well as its influence on contemporary artists.
Seven thematic chapters explore the extraordinary diversity of body arts
practiced worldwide, both past and present. These range from the role of
body art in traditional societies around the world, from Nigeria to
Amazonia, Samoa, and New Guinea and from the past through the twentieth
century. The theatricality of body is considered in a range of stages
including the masquerades in West Africa, the Japanese Noh theater, the
drag balls of Harlem, and the Sydney Mardi Gras parade. Later chapters
explore themes of beauty and the association of tattoos with the
socially marginal, before moving to the revival in the twentieth- and
twenty-first centuries of body art as a means of expressing individual
and cultural identity as demonstrated in the "modern primitive"
movement, performance art, and celebrity tattoo culture.
A wealth of illustrations reflects the many manifestations of body art,
including tattooing, piercing, scarification, masquerade, hairstyles,
performance art, and more.