Tattoos move into cultural mainstream
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[September 25, 2017]
By Mark Hanrahan
LONDON (Reuters) - Mothers shopping with
teenage children and parents pushing baby buggies joined the crowds of
body art enthusiasts at this weekend's annual London Tattoo Convention,
underscoring the increasing acceptance of tattoos in mainstream culture.
The London convention, one of Europe's biggest tattoo events, saw over
400 artists from around the world converge on an east London convention
center, which organizers expect will host over 20,000 people during the
three-day event.
"There's been a total global shift in attitude," Marcus Berriman,
organizer of the London Tattoo Convention told Reuters, of the British
public's attitude toward ink.
"Once upon a time, people associated it with criminals and bikers and
punks, but now it's mainstream really," he said, adding "it's on a
completely different level to where it was 10 years ago."
With a 2015 YouGov poll suggesting that almost one fifth of British
adults have tattoos, and other research suggests that visible body art
may be becoming less of a barrier to employment - a longstanding problem
for tattoo enthusiasts.
A 2016 survey carried out by Ipsos MORI for Britain's Police Federation
found that 81 percent of respondents said that a police officer having
visible tattoos would make no difference to their confidence in their
ability to do their job.
In addition, Britain's employment conciliation service, Acas, advised
employers that tattoos should not be a barrier to hiring, though many at
the event were clearly not concerned at the potential effects of visible
tattoos on their careers.
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visitor to the London Tattoo Convention shows off his tattoos, in
London Britain, September 23, 2017. REUTERS/Peter Nicholls
"I think the jobs I would do, tattooing on the neck or the face
wouldn’t be a problem – I hope so," said Julian Zahn, 20, who was
visiting from Germany and was in the process of having a large
pinwheel design tattooed onto his back.
Some enthusiasts for body art have encountered problems. British
solicitors Atwells published case studies in 2016 documenting the
cases of several workers - including a consultant, a waitress and a
retail employee - who were fired for contravening policies against
visible tattoos.
The firm said that employers in all cases insisted they were acting
within their legal rights presenting an obstacle for a growing
section of Britain's workforce.
Despite these obstacles, tattoo artists suggested that Britain might
be a European outlier in terms of its increasingly liberal attitude
to tattooing.
"I think it’s different in other countries. In England, it’s more
cool, more accepted, than in France or in other places," French
artist Guillaume Smash said.
(Writing by Mark Hanrahan in London; Editing by Stephen Powell)
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