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Time and Tide Museum: Tattooists' artworks go on display

  • Published

An exhibition which tells the history of tattoos in Britain has opened in Great Yarmouth.

Tattoo: British Tattoo Art Revealed features 400 items, including original artworks, photographs and paraphernalia.

Margaret Dewsbury, Norfolk County Council cabinet member for communities, said: "Hosting an exhibition about tattoos in Great Yarmouth - a town with such a rich maritime heritage - is a delightful link. However, visitors to this fascinating and wide-ranging show will soon discover tattooing is not just for sailors."

Image source, National Maritime Museum Cornwall
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Richard Doughty, director of the National Maritime Museum Cornwall - which brought together the collection, said: "We are enormously proud of this groundbreaking and award-winning exhibition."

Image source, National Maritime Museum Cornwall
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The exhibition in Great Yarmouth includes examples of tattoo art going back to the early years of tattooing in Britain.

Image source, National Maritime Museum Cornwall
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Tattoo equipment used by tattoists over the years will also be on display.

Image source, National Maritime Museum Cornwall
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The exhibition, collected by the National Maritime Museum Cornwall, includes the story of Britain's pioneering female tattoo artist, Jessie Knight.

Image source, National Maritime Museum Cornwall
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It is estimated that about one in five of the UK population is tattooed and this figure rises to one in three for young adults.

Image source, National Maritime Museum Cornwall
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Jessie Knight (1904 - 1992), who was born in Wales, was the first prominent female tattoo artist in the UK.

Image source, National Maritime Museum Cornwall
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The Great Omi - born Horace Leonard Ridler (1882-1965) in Surrey, became a sideshow attraction due to his tattoos. The tattoo work by George ‘Professor’ Burchett (1872-1953) took 140 hours.

The exhibition is at the until 8 March 2020.

Images provided by the National Maritime Museum Cornwall

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