People can get tattoos by the visiting artists. Inkin Tattoo Festival shows art is more than skin-deep
Tattooing is an art form that has existed for millennia. It uses the human body as its canvas. Millions of people have adorned their bodies with works of art over the years.
You can show off your tattoos and meet talented tattoo artists showcasing their artistic skills at the Inkin Shreveport Tattoo Festival, which will be held Aug. 23-25 at the Shreveport Convention Center. The festival will feature contests, vendors, entertainment and kids’ activities. Admission is $25 per day or $50 for a three-day pass.
According to Aaron Antonucci, the producer and promoter of Inkin Productions, which hosts tattoo festivals that travel the country, this is the Inkin Festival’s second year in Shreveport.
“I started (the company) in Biloxi (Miss.) after Hurricane Katrina ’cause people had nothing to do, and I wanted to give them something different to do and educate them on proper tattooing and tattoo techniques and stop the spread of disease by doing home tattoos,” he said. The festival is an offshoot of that. “I’ve got three of them now, and I’m building a few more.”
How did Shreveport get into the mix?
“Honestly, I was just looking around decent-sized cities that didn’t have anything like this, and I came across Shreveport. One of my friends used to live there, and I figured we’d give it a shot.”
Last year’s festival, Antonucci said, could have moved faster.
“But
a lot of people didn’t understand that they could come and get
tattooed. A lot of people thought it was just to show off tattoos or to
watch people tattoo, and that’s not what it’s for. It’s for people to
come and get tattooed by people they wouldn’t normally get tattooed by.”
What
exactly can people expect from this festival? “Of course, we have
people getting tattoos. There are all kinds of vendors, anything from
candles to knickknacks. There’s musical entertainment.
We
have sideshows. Then we have a bunch of tattoo contests. The attendees
are allowed to enter any tattoo that they have into any contest that
they want. So, it’s just a big, giant tattoo party, almost,” Antonucci
said.
Artists
will have their portfolios on the tables, “and you can come up and tell
them, ‘Hey, I want a frog holding a wine glass,’ or whatever, and
they’ll draw that for you, and you guys will discuss a price, and once
you agree on a price, they’ll start tattooing it on you.”
Although
last year’s festival was a bit slow, response on social media to the
upcoming show has been “incredible.” People are really excited about it,
Antonucci said.
What is the fascination with tattoos?
“Tattoos
give people a chance to express themselves through art and other art
mediums. It gives them a chance to express themselves without having to
say anything. Some people use it to show who they are, what their
heritage is. Some people use it because they like a certain kind of
artwork. Some people use it because they want to memorialize somebody,”
Antonucci said. “There’s so many different reasons for people to get
tattoos, but it’s usually for people who want to keep a moment in their
life with them forever.”
Current
popular images for tattoos vary widely. “It’s everything,” Antonucci
said. “There’s no such thing as a current image. It’s everything.
Portraits, Victorian, the old traditional, old school, naval stuff.
Anything. It’s literally anything.”
Antonucci
has seen his share of unusual tattoos. “Not stuff that we can discuss,”
Antonucci said with a boisterous laugh. “I’ve tattooed every part of
the body.”
Tattoos
have evolved from monochromatic sketches to multi-colored works of
art. Today, customers can get photorealistic tattoos.
Antonucci’s
idea of the perfect tattoo is pretty simple. “Whatever makes the
customer smile and feel good on the inside. It don’t matter if it’s a
stick figure. The artist may not like it, but if it makes that customer
happy, that’s what matters. That’s the perfect tattoo.”
What
happens if a mistake is made -- say, a word is misspelled? That’s
pretty rare because tattoos are double- and triple-checked. These tattoo
artists have been experts in their profession for many, many years.
Do
you have a tattoo you’re proud of, or do you plan to get one? The
festival will have contests in various categories. “There are a couple
of categories where the tattoo has to be done at the show, and that’s,
like, Tattoo of the Day and Best of Show, but anybody can enter their
tattoos at the show,” Antonucci said.
Since
some tattoos are located in, shall we say, out-of-the-way places, don’t
worry. There is no nudity at the festival, which is designed to be
kid-friendly. “Everything is done tastefully. We even have bounce houses
and face painters, all that kind of stuff for the kids,” he said. “We
try to keep everything family-friendly.”