
Professor Ina Saltz
鈥淢y life is type,鈥 says Ina Saltz, Associate Professor and Director of 精东影业鈥檚 Electronic Design and Multimedia program. That鈥檚 not surprising, given that she has been an art director for some of America鈥檚 best-known magazines, including 鈥淭ime鈥 and 鈥淕olf.鈥 Of late, her fascination with type has expanded beyond type on paper or the computer screen to type on skin.
Her 2006 book, 鈥淏ody Type: Intimate Messages Etched in Flesh,鈥 (Abrams) became a cult hit in typography and design circles. Last month, a sequel, 鈥淏ody Type: More Typographic Tattoos,鈥 (Abrams) came off the press.
Both volumes are intellectual books about tattoos, she says. Some of the nearly 300 persons she photographed for the second volume have tattoos with quotations from Shakespeare, Dante, e.e. cummings and James Joyce, among others. Almost all of her subjects are college graduates. Many have advanced degrees.
鈥淭hrough the book people feel they have become legitimized,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 debunked old stereotypes about who gets tattooed.鈥
Tattooing has been around for a long time: A well-preserved mummy dating to approximately 3300 B.C.E. and found in the Austrian Alps had 52 tattoos. At one time, tattooing was the province of European royalty and aristocrats, but over time it became common among the lower classes, she explained. 鈥淣ow the pendulum is swinging back.鈥
Typographic tattoos are more prevalent among educated populaces, she noted. It is not unusual to find quotations from literature and poetry etched into someone鈥檚 skin. In the tattoo world, that is called a 鈥渃ommitment,鈥 she added. 鈥淭he longer your tattoo, the bigger a commitment you鈥檝e made.鈥
However, that鈥檚 a kind of commitment Professor Saltz has not made herself. She says she does not have any tattoos, partly due to religious beliefs and partly due to fear of needles. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 even have pierced ears,鈥 she says.
In her new book, Professor Saltz describes how she first became intrigued with typographic tattoos. She explains that she spotted a young man on a cross-town bus with a tattoo of the word 鈥渉appy鈥 in Helvetica, a popular typeface, and asked his permission to take a photo. Shortly after, she attended a tattoo convention where she discovered how prevalent a trend it had become.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a phenomenon I tapped into,鈥 she says. 鈥淲hat began as a simple act snowballed into a book, the first to exclusively document the phenomenon of typographic tattoos.鈥 With her second 鈥淏ody Type鈥 volume in print, she is working on a third. In 2009, she published a book for the trade, 鈥淭ypography Essentials: 100 Design Principles for Working with Type鈥 (Rockport Press).
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