Mexican tattoos are a huge part of the Mexican culture. They’re often
fierce and bold, with imagery featuring skulls and death a popular part
of the designs. The Aztec roots are often seen in these tatts, and they
are evening gaining in popularity among a wider audience across the
whole world.
Symbolism and Culture
Mexican
tattoo designs are brash and bold. They pull predominantly on three
points of inspiration, Aztec history, religion and the underworld.
Death, skulls, smoke and ghouls play a big part in the sub culture of
Mexican tattooing.
Mexican and Aztec tattoos are known for their
grey and black shading. They incorporate a lot of smoke and snakes.
Headdresses feature heavily in their design and iconic skull designs
with ornate feather headdresses are common. As with many types of tattoo
such as swallows, spider’s webs and scales of justice, Mexican tattoos
have been adopted by prisoners and gang members as status tattoos.
They
are a means of identifying your status and crime to other prisoners.
But as with a lot of tattoo designs, they have hidden meaning and
symbolism. A prisoner should do his research first to ensure that he
gets the right one, otherwise at a later date; he might have to pay for
his choice. A man with a skull for a head sitting in a rocking chair
symbolises that the wearer is a murderer, as does a double headed snake.
In prison, the wearer might have to prove that statement to be true and
there would always be plenty of contenders up for the challenge.
Sugar skull tattoos have been hugely popular for decades. A beautiful woman wearing Day of the Dead
make up is the most common choice of sugar skull tattoo but there are
thousands of designs in the genre. Another popular one is sugar skull
bikers. These are often worn by ‘brothers’ when a biker has died. The
tattoo will often depict a biker on his personal ride with a sugar skull
for a head and the deceased’s details in a scroll below.
Sugar Skulls and their Origin
Sugar
skulls relate to one of South America’s largest economic resources, the
sugar plantation. Natives were forced into slavery and it was them, not
the Mexicans, who first made sugar skulls. They were used in voodoo and
black magic as a religious substitute for real skulls and so the
cultural tattoos depicting sugar skulls found its way across the border
and into the Mexican culture. Mexico has taken them over and claimed
them as her own for hundreds of years. Sugar skulls are still used in
Mexico today to celebrate Dia de los Muertos, a month-long celebration
symbolising the cycle of life and death.
Other Varieties of Mexican Tattoo
Mexican
tattoos are also heavily influenced by religion. They are a
predominantly catholic country and the Virgin Mary, rosary beads and
crossed hands are often depicted in Mexican tattoo art.
Mexico is
saturated with gang warfare, often between Latino and
Californian-American factions. Area codes are a big thing in Mexican
tattoo culture. Where you come from and who you are is important, often
one can’t be separated from the other and your area code is worn as a
mark of pride and as a territorial patch.
‘Tres Puntos’, means ‘My
Crazy Life,’ also used in Spanish Tattoos and translated as ‘Mi Vida
Loca.’ This phrase features in a lot of Mexican tattoos and is linked in
prison and gang culture to the older, ‘Smile now, cry later’ tattoos.
Mexican tattoos often use dots to indicate meaning. Dot tattoos are used
in prison codes. The number of dots you have has a different meaning
and is a code to other prisoners or gang members.
Interestingly,
the gecko makes a significant appearance in Mexican tattoos. Mexico has
a dessert terrain, while Polynesia is oceanic and yet, the two cultures
both feature geckos significantly in their tattoo art.
Orange and
red are predominant colours used in Mexican tattoos and can make for
some striking and beautiful artwork. Mexican tattoos also make great use
of the sun in their designs in deference of the sun God,
Huitzilopochtili. The sun was the guardian of the heavens and the sun
symbolises belief in the afterlife in Mexican tattoos. Mexican pride
tattoos are also popular, usually depicting the Mexican flag as Natives
fight to keep their land and their Mexican Independence.
A lot of
the Mythology surrounding Mexican tattoos can be dark. Do your research
and ensure that you are happy with your tattoo before you commit.
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