Skip to main content

The Manual may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site.

Discover the Art and History of Ink in ‘Vintage Tattoo Flash: Volume II’

Vintage Tattoo Flash
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Not all tattoos are fine art. Many are not art at all, and are quite the opposite. But not all paintings, sculptures, sketches, or video installations are fine art, either. What qualifies one tattoo, one painting, or one statue as a successful artistic endeavor, and what relegates another to classifications — from tawdry to trite to simply no good — is often in the eye of the beholder. There is that almost impossible to define, yet undeniable quality, that the late author Robert Pirsig almost went mad in trying to isolate, the quality of, well … quality.

Vintage Tattoo Flash Volume II
Image used with permission by copyright holder

In the pages of Vintage Tattoo Flash: Volume II (Power House Books, October 2017), the reader finds hundreds of samples of 20th century tattoo art. The term “tattoo flash” refers to the images commonly pasted on the walls of a tattoo parlor from which a potential customer can search for designs he or she wants to have inked onto their skin. Tattoo flash is largely an ephemeral art form, in that the samples will, in time, be replaced or simply removed (and a tattoo on a person’s body has an end-of-life expiration date). Most tattoo flash, in other words, is lost to the ages.

Recommended Videos

This book, compiled from the archives of famed tattoo artist and entrepreneur (and magazine founder, occasional actor, writer, arts promoter, felon, etc.) Jonathan Shaw, not only ensures the longtime preservation of hundreds of tattoo flash designs, but elevates flash to the level it deserves. Seen on skin or the walls of a parlor, these graphics are merely tattoos in the eyes of most viewers. Seen in the pages of this oversized coffee table book, they are art.

Well, most of them.

Not all of the images found in this book — or found on the flesh of the people who selected this or that template for permanent installation on their bodies — count as art. The racially stereotyped Chinese infant perched in a small bath, hands plunged below the water in the direction of his nether over a caption reading “I’m Holding My Own” does not belong in the same category as Rodin’s The Burghers of Calais. But a gorgeous, colorful rendering of a skull transfixed upon a dagger with the words “Death Before Dishonor” written out on a scroll wrapped around the tableau does. Why? Because it is rich and it is beautiful. Keep in mind the beauty is not always easy on the eyes; just take a close look at the tortured expressions of the aforementioned Burghers completed back in 1889 if you think beauty is always nice to look at.

Vintage Tattoo Flash: Volume II features countless classic graphics, from the iconic name-over-heart tattoo (often the name is “Mom”) to the naked ladies to the dragons and so forth. It features military and patriotic iconography aplenty. It has religious flash, cartoon flash, nautical flash, and more.

But the book is more than just a catalog of lots of old tattoo designs. It also invites the reader on a trip through nearly a century’s worth of history. Now, in the 21st century, most people don’t bat an eye when they see a tattoo, provided it’s not an overtly sexual, tasteless, or offensive ink job. This was not always the case. In fact, up until the past few decades, people with tattoos — and tattoo artists — were very much part of a subculture, seen as outcasts and degenerates by most members of society. The book features images of people with tattoos from generations in which having ink on the body was a bold act.

Seeing tattoo flash from years gone by alongside those bearing the artwork on their skin brings a further depth to this art form, an art that, until so recently, was nothing more than the deviant hobby of strange people lurking in the darker allies away from the well-lit galleries and salons where art was on display.

Topics
Steven John
Steven John is a writer and journalist living just outside New York City, by way of 12 years in Los Angeles, by way of…
The Lego Disney Princess Advent Calendar is $20 at Walmart
The Lego Disney Princess Advent Calendar on a white background.

Christmas is fast approaching! Fathers who want to start getting into the holiday spirit with their daughters may want to purchase the Lego Disney Princess Advent Calendar, which is currently on sale from Walmart with a $25 discount that slashes its price to just $20 from $45 originally. We're not sure how long you've got to get this fun Advent calendar for less than half-price though, so if you want to take advantage of this amazing bargain from Lego deals, and you want to get it in time before December arrives, we highly recommend pushing through with the transaction today.

Why you should buy the Lego Disney Princess Advent Calendar
The Lego Disney Princess Advent Calendar, just like any other Advent calendar, counts the days to Christmas from December 1. However, this one features a Lego character or a Lego build from various Disney Princess movies for each day, including Elsa from Frozen, Tiana from The Princess and the Frog, and Ariel from The Little Mermaid. You'll also open Elsa's ice palace, Ariel's undersea palace, and a Christmas tree, among many others. Of course, you won't know what you and your daughter will get until you open the box for each day of the Lego Disney Princess Advent Calendar.

Read more
A ‘Challengers’ star will headline Steven Spielberg’s next film
The film is an original action movie that apparently has elements of science fiction.
Josh O'Connor in Challengers

Few directors are bigger name brands than Steven Spielberg, and even at this late point in his career, plenty of people still pay incredibly close attention to every new film he puts out. Variety is is reporting that, for his next film, the legendary director has cast Josh O'Connor in the lead role.

Plot details about the upcoming film are still being kept under wraps, but the studio has described it as a "new original event film." Spielberg is directing it from a script by David Koepp, who has previously worked with the director on Jurassic Park, War of the Worlds, and Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. The screenplay is apparently based on a story idea from Spielberg and is supposed to include sci-fi elements.

Read more
Apple’s next prestige series is a remake of a Hollywood classic
The minieseries is adapted from a film that has already been remade once.
Javier Bardem in No Country for Old Men

Apple TV+ has had a run of hugely successful prestige TV series, and it looks like it's hoping to add another to the mix. Variety is reporting that the streamer is adapting Cape Fear to the smalls screen, and that Oscar-winner Javier Bardem is set to take on one of the lead roles.

According to the official logline: “A storm is coming for happily married attorneys Amanda and Steve Bowden when Max Cady (Bardem), a notorious killer from their past, gets out of prison.”

Read more