A tattooed person suspends from hooks, laying flat, one leg higher than the other. Their head is back, and they seem to be smiling, dark hair dangling like an anime character.

Category: ModBlog

  • BME Newsfeed for Aug 9, 2005

    Please note that links may expire. IAM members, please help out by submitting stories!

  • Oslo SusCon, Day Three

    First, some more pictures from Allen Falkner from the 2005 Wings of Desire Oslo SusCon. These are from day three of the event:

    For those of you who’ve never been to a suspension convention, they’re much more than just a bunch of people going so they can hang. Certainly that’s a central aspect, but I think more importantly it’s a gathering of friends and family.. and these days it’s also a travel experience — it’s not as if Oslo is in Rhode Island! Cere (from the NYC chapter of Rites of Passage) discovered some of the differences between home and Norway while talking to locals at a pub:

    Smiling Norwegian: It’s great that you love Oslo; is there anything that you want to see while you’re here?
    Cere: Well, actually a few of us would like to find a local strip club.
    (The Norwegian is no longer smiling.)
    Norwegian: You like that kind of thing?
    Cere: Strip clubs? Well yeh, it’s naked girls… Who doesn’t like naked girls?
    Norwegian: Well I have respect for women!

    At this point the Norwegian storms off, and his sentiments are echoed by the others in the pub. At a later party that night, Cere is offered a giant plate of cocaine as a welcoming gift.

    Smiling Norwegian:

    You like cocaine?

    Cere:

    Nah, I’m good… I don’t sniff, but thank you.

    Norwegian:

    You are an American though?

    Cere:

    Yeah, from New York.

    Norwegian:

    You lie!!! You are not an American if you do not want cocaine!

    Ah stereotypes… America, a nation of strippers doing lines of coke off your cock.

    I think Cere will enjoy SusCon: Red Light District in Amsterdam.

  • Allen Falkner straightens a 6ga hook

    Cue Nelson: “HA HA”

    [Javascript required to view Flash movie, please turn it on and refresh this page]


    DivX download link for BME members: Extreme2 or Full members

    The critical moment is about 1:20 into the clip.

  • A Life Worth Celebrating

    I woke up a few short hours later and, as I’m prone to do, headed straight for my computer. I hopped on IAM, checked my messages, and saw one that read simply, “Sad day.”

    With the London terror attack fresh in my mind, I jump over to CNN, expecting to see the end of the world — but nothing. Then it occurs to me, Of course, BME is under attack again — we’re being shut down for good this time. I go right for Shannon’s page, and that’s where I see it.

    Kind of like stepping out of bed and into a bus.

    It doesn’t seem real because it can’t be.


    CLICK THE PICTURE

  • Tattooed Crooks

    "The original Nazis tattooed their targets so they could always find them later. The new ones tattoo themselves. So we can find them.Hitler'd be ashamed of the morons."

    - Andrew Vachss, in Dead and Gone

    While I can see the temptation in breaking some laws, by golly, stupid criminals crack me up!

    Case (or five) in point: Arizona Republic just listed its Top 10 most wanted. Five — half — of them are tattooed. New York recently debuted its new high-tech command center, which will provide officers crucial data about crimes and suspects including convicts’ nicknames and tattoos even before police arrive at a crime scene (click here for an online demonstration), and Ottawa recently unveiled its new parolee database. From police reports to rap sheets, if you’re modified and you’re arrested, your modifications are going on record.

    Of course, the “winner” is Justin Breakspear of Massachusetts, whose tattoo reveals the serial number of his illegal gun.

    Gives all new meaning to “tattoo gun,” eh?

  • BME Newsfeed for Aug 7, 2005

    Please note that links may expire. IAM members, please help out by submitting stories!

  • Skin Tag Piercing

    By Sonia at Westside Tattoo & Body Piercing in Brisbane, Australia.

  • Oslo SusCon

    Thanks to Allen of suspension.org for sending us some snapshots from this year’s WINGS OF DESIRE Oslo SusCon, going on right now. There’s actually a solid representation of American enthusiasts over there this year… I should have more for you soon (and of course lots on BME later)!

       

    Oh, and to those of you who have been asking for an RSS feed for this blog — I don’t have one yet because I still have to write the code that outputs it, but I’ll try and get that added some time over the next week as we finalize the way this thing is going to run.

  • The mouth hooks are a nice touch

    These pictures (courtesy of IAM:vampy) are from a recent suspension event in London UK hosted by House of Wah, a new group lead by IAM:lefrog. If you’re interested, their next event is at the start of September and includes both private suspensions and a public show.

  • “alienated creatures who live on the fringes of society”

    Horror and science fiction motifs of course are not at all uncommon in the tattoo world, with the majority choosing imagery from modern “big name” films and those with mainstream cult status. Thus I was pleasantly surprised when my friend Midian2000 (who you may know as the organizer of the large So-Cal BME BBQs) chose an image from 1979′s ZOMBIE, perhaps the best living dead film of all time, by Lucio “Violence is Italian Art” Fulci.

    I’ve been a serious horror movie aficionado since I was about nine, with Polanski’s “Fearless Vampire Hunters” being the first film to really move me. All of the art I have tattooed on my body is extremely personal, whether it’s original art, like the pieces Clive Barker created for me, or whether it’s traditional, like my Choctaw pipehead piece. This time around, I felt that it was a moment in my life where I wanted to recognize what part horror, from films to books, has played in my life, and to honor that element of who I am. The image needed, in a single frame, to capture friction, stress, fear, horror, terror, threat, and madness. It needed to be iconographic … an image that embodied the catharsis derived from true horror.

    In Stephen Thrower’s amazing book Beyond Terror: The Films of Lucio Fulci one frame of film popped out at me: the infamous splinter scene from Zombie. I had to have it. The original piece of art was a poorly reproduced, stark, black and white picture, but I knew there was potential in it. When I originally told Denny Besnard (Avalon II, San Diego CA) that I wanted it rendered in nothing but black and red, he strongly disagreed, saying he’d prefer to do it in a palate ranging from black to red, with everything from white to orange and yellow, in between. He thought he could bring this simple, still image to life through a narrow range of color — the results, I believe, speak for themselves.


    “If you blink, you miss so much…
    so don’t blink at all if you can help it.”

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