Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Kismet. Or serendipity. Or..."Don't I know you from somewhere?"

A quick prelude: Yes, I know, we've not written in a couple of weeks. Spent a few days down with head colds, then we snuck out of town for a little holiday last week :)

EK:

I believe that in everyone's life, we sometimes meet someone new -- a friend, or a partner, or a lover, or a buddy you just happen to share a hobby you're nuts about, for example -- and for some reason, that someone new seems a hell of a lot like someone you've crossed paths before. It's like deja vu in the coolest way possible, and at some points, makes you sit back, scratch your head and say "what the...?"

 



Well, even within the confines of US Skin Grafx, while we draw our customs, look and admire the new work of our fellow artists out there, and jawjack about anything at all to the background of rock 'n' roll music, such a thing happens.

My former partner-in-crime, Spitfire Sus, brought Alicia to the shop, as said Alicia wanted ink. Well, the first time they came over, I was smack in the middle of a large piece and couldn't really get up to do a full consult. They were patient, though, and pretty soon, Alicia told me about what she wanted.
She had an original piece, done in Michigan some years back. Then it got covered up with a butterfly -- I believe the coverup was done by plonking the butterfly's body (in black), and then embellished by a tri-color wing which was red, blue and yellow. After a few years, the yellow colour dimmed a little.

The conversation went loosely like this:
"So what're you thinking of?" I asked.
"I'd like an expansion. I want to add to this piece and grow it," she said, "Like into a halfsleeve."

Seeing as we couldn't get gauge the reaction of a half sleeve from her bosses, we eventually decided to play safe and opted for a quarter sleeve first -- we can grow it into a half if she liked later.  Then came the details: What would you like, I asked?

Here was the directive:  "I love color.  I *LOVE* color!!!!" she said. Point taken.
So I suggested a butterfly perched on a branch with leaves... lots of beautiful, elegantly arranged lea-
"Not green, lah," she interjected.
"Huh?" I asked, a little dumbfounded.
"I don't want any green, don't like green," she said, at first, impassively.

Now at this point, I had to put on my powers of persuasion. Fact is, Alicia has some envy-worthy, awesomely gorgeous skin -- gold-tinged alabaster is the best way to put it. I was dying to draw and color on her arm like a kid with her first complete set of Crayolas. And put green in it!

A last look before Ali gets stuck with needles. The old butterfly and the stencil on.


Finally, we managed a compromise -- it was ok to put a tiny bit of lime green here and there, as an accent. But colourful was the catchphrase to go. So we took a measurement of where we were going to go for her tattoo, plus made a few more ideas how to bring the butterfly -- done by one of KL's more well known artists -- to greater prominence: blend the lime into the wings,  so there's a measure of visual congruence between the old tattoo and the new.

The decision, thus, was to design curling branches with cherry blossoms perching on the spindly ends, as well as a few petals floating here and there. And little butterflies dancing throughout.

In her second visit, she brought her husband Andrew, who we also immediately took to (partly because he's an avid diver and you know, all divers are essentially some of the best people in the world), and we made a few very minor tweaks to the design. A date was set, and it was on.

At that point, it was starting to feel, oddly, that both of them were more family than friends, let alone new acquaintances. To me, it felt a bit like kismet (thanks to Farrell Tan for helpfully providing the word).

We stuck the stencil. I always get a little nervous over stencils that wrap around a limb, so Randy helped me out there. And then it was on. First, the outlines in black, and the wispy flourishes that start out purple and slowly blending into blue, then a tiny bit of grey shading here and there before tattooing the colours -- magentas, pinks, lavenders, onto the flowers and teals and deep pinks into the butterflies.

At some point, we started chatting. Bear in mind that at this point, we still didn't know a lot about each other, and the conversation led to "what were you doing before what you do now?"  And she mentioned managing a restaurant -- a Thai one -- in Subang Jaya. Naturally, the next question to ask was its name.

"Khanom Jeen," she said. I was pretty taken aback; enough to lift my foot off the pedal.
"You mean...the one with all the gold leaf art on the walls?" I asked.
"Yes, yes," she said, looking at me a bit curiously.
"And khanom jeen(Thai rice noodles) comes in these little curled up twirls of noodles... so very cute?"
"Yes, that's it!"
"And your artwork comes from an artist who popularised gold leaf...based at Bangkok's Chaktuchak???" I asked, almost disbelieving it.
"Oh my god, you know the place," she said.

Know it, I did! Years ago, when I was working at the Metro section of The People's Paper, I was stomping around in Taipan Subang and that restaurant (then newly opened) caught my eye. I decided to have lunch therer, and was so impressed with the food that I asked them whether they would want to be reviewed. The man who was presumably managing the place took my business card and said "Well, this is a coincidence. I've been wondering how to get a hold of you to review this place for the past few weeks."

Now, naturally, a dinky tinky little junior reporter doesn't get to hear this everyday, and I had to force my swelled head and ego through the door to leave. But review it, I did, and I'm happy to note that Khanom Jeen became one of the respected Thai outlets in the Klang Valley until its owners (Evon Au -- Alicia's sister, and her husband David Knapfel) moved to Canada and closed with much regret from diners. Alicia said that she was there practically every day, which could mean that we might have crossed paths in previous careers before.

An alternate look at the "after". Dunno why this girl doesn't do green a lot...it looks gorgeous on her!

Then we moved on to the next conversation, and for some inexplicable reason, it moved to the topic of Perak -- what the towns are and (naturally), what to eat. Sure, we jawed about the many culinary delights of Ipoh, and then someone mentioned Teluk Intan (then Telok Anson way back in the 1980s), a small town then and a small town now.
"I grew up there, I'm from TA," she said.
My foot went off the pedal again and I stared at her incredulously.  "I spent my childhood there, growing up at my grandparents' house!"


Ok, this is getting weird, right. We compared kindergartens (Taman Sicily for her, and the Assumption near the Raja Muda's digs for me). "Yeah, I remember my neighbour Mrs Muthu -- a sari-garbed Chinese lady married to an Indian -- taking me to school in her yellow car because Mrs Muthu was my neighbour at Kampung Guru," I said.
(Kampung Guru is (was?) a section in a tranquil part of the town, surrounded by fields and green and lots of open space. It was originally allotted for civil servants, especially teachers, when it first opened. An idyllic place for a kid to grow up).

Alicia looked at me in disbelief. "You mean, Kampung Guru with the big field in the middle that boys played football in, right?"
"That one," I said. "I lived at No. 7!"
"Hey, guess what... that's where I grew up too.  I'm at number 30-something (ok, I forgot the actual number) My parents are still there," she said, and broke out into a great big laugh.

It was pretty incredible and slightly freaky to both of us. Somewhere at the back of my mind, I just hoped that being the spoilt little monster I was, I didn't swank too much around the neighbourhood and bully a toddler that could very well have been the gal I was, well, poking with needles right there and then.

Anyway, we finished the tattoo soon after. Andrew brought over lunch, so we chomped that down, and over discussions about diving and food, we became new friends. Or old friends. I can seriously say, this was one truly memorable tattoo, thanks to Alicia and Andrew and of course, thanks to Susan for bringing it all together!


Thursday, January 13, 2011

A special place worth sharing.

Randy: Today, I'd like to tell you about a wonderful acquaintance we've made here who happens to be based out of a great place to go for art supplies of just about any kind, especially drawing and painting. It's a family-owned and operated shop in the Chinatown area of Kuala Lumpur, run by Mr Yap and his family, all of whom have intimate knowledge and information regarding the supplies they sell. We look forward to every visit to Venus Art, because when we go there, we will not be treated like a wallet with legs, but as friends.

Personally, I have been to a good number of art stores here in KL, almost all of which are corporate franchises with employees who are there solely for the paycheck, and have neither an interest in what they sell, nor in doing anything more than what they are forced to do to keep their jobs. The most commonly heard response from the staff at these establishments is "I don't know". (EK: Once in a while, we'll come across a staff member with more initiative who would help out a little more, but these occurrences tend to be few and far in between) Before we discovered Venus Art, we ventured into one of these establishments looking for some simple drawing supplies, and spent well over an hour walking up and down aisle after aisle of current trend products trying to find a handful of items which none of the sales staff could help point us toward.

After several attempts to get the attention of the employees, and asking questions, describing the items we were looking for, we asked to see the manager; "I don't know" had gotten a bit old. To my surprise, even the manager was unable to direct us to most of these common items, and although she was very polite in her reiteration of "I don't know", we left the shop without many of the things we went for in the first place. As we walked out, we both agreed we felt a distinct sense that we had wasted more time than what we got from the visit was worth.

Then, we discovered Venus Art, and life improved in a matter of minutes. The service was amazing, Mr Yap and his daughter both had knowledge of everything we asked for, including uncommon items that're usually special-order only, even in the US. During the conversation, I forgot I was in a store owned by a stranger. The whole visit was much more like going to see an artist friend and borrowing some supplies from them. The stock was much more artist-oriented than any of the other stores we'd visited, and much less of the trendy-cool-in-fashion stuff that's advertised as being able to turn anyone into Picasso himself.

We piled items into our little basket with the excitement of two kids on Christmas morning, and before I knew it, we had twice as much as we'd gone to get in the first place. As I got to the register, Mr Yap's daughter began to total us up. It was then that I realized how much we had put into the basket, and I prepared myself for a four-digit total, assuming that the prices would be akin to what was being charged in the franchise stores, only higher given the much better quality of the products.

At that point, I noticed that there were several drawings pasted on the wall behind her. One particularly striking piece was a sketch of the Eiffel Tower. The simplicity of the design suggested it was a child's drawing, and as I looked at it, I felt the mental shift that defines masterpiece works, where one loses their own perceptions and is transported behind the eyes of the artist, seeing what they saw as they created it.
Whoever had sketched the piece wasn't bound by the rules of perfection and accuracy, and had firmly translated perception that even included mood onto the surface of the paper.

I asked about the drawing, and was told the owner's granddaughter had done it a few years before, when she was about eight years of age. The very same girl now stared up at me from a chair behind the counter where she was drawing, smiling broadly at my compliments on her sketch. She told me that she had done it "a long time ago", but made no attempt whatsoever to explain any of the "imperfections" that most adult artists, including myself, seem to find in anything they do. She was happy and satisfied with her work in a way all too uncommon in older artists; and rightly so.

And then the total came, to my shock, to much less than what I had expected it would be. Top quality supplies, great service, friendly conversation with fellow artists, and now this: it was like a dream from which I'd hate waking from. I had found my art supplier, made new friends, and found a shop I could recommend to just about anyone. I have since sent many people there, and every one of them returns with a similar feeling to mine the day I first walked into their shop.

Professionally and personally, we both recommend checking them out -- it's an experience you won't regret. Venus Art is at no 90, Jalan Petaling, 50000 Kuala Lumpur. Tel: 03-2072 8807.
Venus Art is closed on Sunday.

And while you're there, remember to tell the Yaps hi from Randy and Ee Koon!
 

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

A Fish has Swallowed the Tasmanian Devil



EK:

We've been building a bank of stories and blogs to post, though the shop keeps our hands and brains at work enough that we delegate a day to publish the blog. Last week, we had our hands full between inking, piercing, entertaining and doing consults, so this one comes a little late. Well, better late than never.

Andy came to us about a month ago, to ask us to cover up an old piece he had. We bumped into him by chance as he happened to be looking for us, at the Western restaurant, Wild Basil, almost directly opposite the entrance to the shop, and it was pretty evident from the start that he was a lot like the shop regulars we had back in the States -- he's laidback, he likes a laugh or two, and he brings his own music to share. Hey, new music to listen to is a bonus, right? 

(As an aside, we welcome almost any music any friends or clients might bring, so long as it is not preachy, or brain-numbinglyrepetitious or brain-numbing per se ... and yes, we have a definite lean towards the genre of rock)


He's spent some time in Glasgow (which I suppose makes him part Glaswegian), and joined the Scottish Navy for a while. A sense of patriotic duty led to this tat, which has been on him for over 10 years: Yup, it's Taz bearing the Scottish flag and a banner telling where he's from. Personally, I thought it was pretty cute. Come on, who doesn't like the Tazzer?


We kicked around some ideas as to what to cover it up with, and he ended up asking to have two different drawings done, from which he would choose. Now I have said it time and again that the best coverups are always custom drawn to fit the wearer. You just can't find a piece of flash and plonk it on top of an old tat. Well, you can, it's just not always as effective. So it was a custom coverup all the way.


The first I drew was of a koi (his first choice) curling to leap upwards -- traditionally, of course, the koi jumping upwards turns into a dragon once it enters the heavenly skies.  Maybe that is why the Cantonese call it "kum loong yee" (erm, golden dragon fish? I'm not sure) A symbol of great growth, prosperity and good luck.  And a thistle in the background, as it's Scotland's national flower.


Initially, he worried whether it would be fitting to have a thistle with a koi or not, and my answer was, well, if it fits you, why worry about what anyone else would say?  When it comes to tats, it's almost always about the person who wears it, and never the society aorund the person.


The second version was an old school sailing ship, but Andy said he'd never live it down with his friends so we KO'ed that option.  The line drawing is still with me.


Halfway through, he emailed me asking to insert the words "The World Is Yours" which are found on the banner of a sculpture. Which happened to be a prop in that Al Pacino classic, Scarface. I really couldn't think of anything more befitting the piece, so we proceeded by picking a Gothic-style treatment to the words and pumped it into an illustrative style banner.

We also opted for black and grey (he's not real big on loads of color) with the thistle coloured in, and some 'backlight' in the scales to further obscure the blue.


These pics show a little bit of the process:
Say hi to Taz!  Isn't he a cutie!



Say goodbye to Taz. And the coverup's done, after the second session. Greyscale done. The white highlights are not so evident at this point. Mainly because it was late evening when the pic was taken and his skin was still pretty red. And we've never Photoshopped a pic in our lives :)



All in all, we had a good time having Andy around. Oh, and speaking of bringing music, he introduced us to bands like Kasabian and I had my first listen of Arctic Monkeys. I know, I know, it sounds like I've been living under a rock not to have heard the Monkeys, but yanno, half the time I am humming Zeppelin in my head, and they're kinda sorta like almost musical grandfathers to the Arctic Monkeys...sort of. hehe.

Next time, I'll tell you about meeting a new client (who I'm lucky to now also call a friend) who could have/most probably indeed have crossed paths with me before in the past, not only once, but twice. But that's another story for another time.



Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Observations on Then and Now

Randy:  Take heart, my tattooed friends; even here in Malaysia, life for the tattooed is getting easier by the day. Let me tell you a little story about my visit here just over three and a half years ago, and you'll understand what I am saying. Tattoos are getting more mainstream, and no longer do tattoos mark you as a thug or social outcast.

My first night here, right off of the plane, we stopped for food at a roadside hawker stand. My wife had told me that I'd better cover up my tattooed arms to avoid problems at the customs counter, and I was wearing a cotton hoody. I was sweating like the proverbial pig in the 27C heat even at three am in July. No one nearby appeared to be tatted, but I was clear of customs, so I removed the hoody, exposing my ink.

It was as if permission had somehow been given to those that sat at the tables around us. First, a young lady at the table just to the right of ours took off her overshirt, and exposed a small tribal phoenix on her back, just below her neck. Then a gent to the left of us pulled off his light jacket and exposed some work he had on his forearm. Before we knew it, about a third of the people nearby were suddenly showing ink that they'd kept hidden until I showed mine.

The following day, we tried to hail a cab, and car after car rolled by us, some slowing as if to stop, then speeding away as the drivers saw my flame-ridden arms. In order to get a cab, we had to have a plan and basically ambush one. I would stand away from my wife while she hailed one, pretending we were not together. After the cab stopped and she's already gotten the ok from the driver for our destination, I would run over and hop in. Twice in the ten days I was here, the driver asked us to exit tha cab after seeing my ink.

Now, just a few years later, cabs stop for us, apparently without any reservations whatsoever. The largest English newspaper here, The Star, writes a Metro Feature Article about our shop, and one of their reporters, Priya Menon, gets her first taste of ink for the article so she can share details about the experience firsthand. And I don't have to be the first at a local restaurant to expose my ink, as typically, when I arrive at one, I am already checking out the tattoos being sported by many of the patrons, which are readily and proudly displayed.

Shows like Miami Ink, LA Ink, Tattoo Highway, and London Ink have helped greatly to alert the rest of the world that there are inked people from every walk of life, as have magazines and other media sources. But there is also another source for spreading the word that we often overlook, and that I believe is the singlemost instrumental; everyday tattooed people showing their ink in public without fear of judgment or rejection.

The time has come when Malaysia has escaped the dark ages and the dark thinking about those wearing ink. Let us celebrate the growth of an entire nation with respect to the art we love so much. Wear sleeveless shirts, spaghetti-strap tops, and those sandals that reveal the beautiful, artistic, flowered bands on delicate ankles. Let the world around you see that tattoos are not only art, but art in such pure form that we celebrate it with permanent marks on our very bodies.



EK:
"Don't tell your family this, but the reason so-and-so always wears a t-shirt is because he has got these huge tattoos, and they really are pretty ugly," someone in my extended family whispered to me in my college days.
It really seemed that having ink was more of a mark of scandalousness, and a public symbol of notoriety.  Mind you, that was almost 20 years ago.

Back in those days, it was like a mark of notoriety -- something socially restricted to society save sailors, bikers and whores and people who work in canivals. (Mind you, I've since then met a few of those mentioned above, and they are perfectly decent human beings and in most cases, unworthy of condemnation by a self-righteous 'polite society').

I wouldn't say that things have taken a 180-degree turn and the complete opposite is true today, but they have changed and continue to change in a positive direction, for which I'm sure not just artists but the tattooed at large are so gratified to see.

Ink both good and bad is sported just about everywhere in the United States. In KL, I'm pleasantly surprised at the growth in the amount of people who admit to having ink (part of it hidden under clothing), and indeed, look forward to the day very soon, that not only those within the tattoo industry or those working in more 'permissive' fields like art, film and design and advertising  -- but everyone out there -- is able to publicly and visually show off their tattoos without hesitation.
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I truly have found that in the past few years, more and more Malaysians are finding their ways, discovering their means to define themselves as individuals rather than a member of a collective. It's refreshing, and encouraging, and it paves the way to someone being to say, "I got this tattoo because I want to and it's me," instead of "I have to hide this tat because my grandma's going to kill me if she finds out."  Well, why not?  Having ink doesn't damn you and doesn't make you a worse person, or a source of embarassment. If people are going to judge you for a little bit of self-expression and individuality, then they're probably not the kind of people that you want to keep around you, anyway.

Next post: New pictures, I promise!