Matt Lodder's 'Painted People: 5,000 Years of Tattooed History from Sailors and Socialites to Mummies and Kings' is a lively exploration of an underexamined art.
One of the most stubborn misconceptions about tattooing is that it was born in Polynesia and imported to the West by Captain Cook in 1768, then trickled down to the masses over the next century, settling into military and criminal subcultures until its late-20th century resurrection in the middle class. It’s not only false but also eclipses a much broader and more complex global heritage.
The location, Lodder explains, was “least likely to be seriously burned or slashed by flying debris.” Not every story involves blood and ink: In 1929, following a tattoo craze among young people in the U.S. and Britain, the designer Elsa Schiaparelli created custom swimsuits featuring patterns from an array of classic tattoos copied, she said, “from the manly chests of French mariners.