Inked: Stigma, Otherness, and Art, presented online from September 27, 2025 through September 27, 2026 on the website of the Tang Museum, explores the long and complex history of tattooing as both artistic practice and social marker. Spanning photography, prints, and works on paper, the exhibition considers how permanent marks on the body have signified belonging, resistance, spirituality, punishment, pride, and transformation across centuries and cultures. By unfolding in a digital format, the project mirrors the way tattoo culture circulates today—shared across networks, communities, and borders.
The exhibition takes its title from the ancient Greek term “stigma,” once referring simply to a puncture or mark, and now synonymous with social disgrace. This linguistic shift reveals how deeply tattooing has been entangled with systems of judgment and exclusion, particularly in Euro-American contexts where inked skin was historically associated with criminality, deviance, or cultural otherness. Yet the works gathered here challenge that narrow reading. Through documentary photography and contemporary artistic responses, viewers encounter tattooed bodies as sites of agency, self-definition, and creative authorship.
Images reflecting queer communities, prison culture, and other marginalized groups underscore how tattoos can function simultaneously as defiance and solidarity. What may be perceived as a mark of difference from the outside often serves as a powerful emblem of connection within a subculture. Artists featured in
Inked examine this tension between mainstream and outsider, revealing how the body becomes a living archive of memory, trauma, desire, and collective history. As tattooing has moved increasingly into the cultural mainstream, the exhibition also asks what happens when once-stigmatized symbols are embraced as fashionable expressions of individuality.
Organized by Lauren Attwell ’26, the 2024–25 Carole Marchand ’57 Endowed Intern, and supported by the Friends of the Tang, the exhibition extends beyond observation into participation. Visitors are invited to submit photographs and personal reflections through an interactive portal, contributing to a growing digital community. In doing so,
Inked affirms tattooing not only as an art form but as an evolving conversation about identity, visibility, and belonging.
Image:
Catherine Opie, Dyke, 1993, chromogenic print, 18 x 13 1/8 inches, The Jack Shear Collection of Photography at the Tang Teaching Museum, 2015.1.178