Brian Moss
"The current trend," says photog Justice Howard, "is to get tattoo replicas of works by erotic artists like Armanda Huerta, and Olivia whose style takes after another Playboy artist, Alberto Vargas. Howard has had the honor of her own photographic work copied as a tattoo. One of her ardent fans even requested permission to have her own portrait tattooed on his butt cheek. "Apparently, there was nowhere else on his heavily tattooed body to put it," muses Howard.
This would be the time to deploy the clich�, 'Beauty is in the eye of the beholder,' especially when the object of admiration lies below the pantyline where few eyes will ever get to judge. The 'face on derriere' brings into question, yet again, the question of what's really erotic, and if it isn't entirely subjective. New York City photographer, Brian Moss, believes that most people under-estimate how complicated 'erotic' actually is.
In addition to being a top fitness photographer, Brian Moss once owned one of the largest and most popular gyms in Manhattan. He points out that 'sexy' has little meaning anymore. Sexy shoes, sexy song, haircut, voice, tattoo, whatever -- what does it mean?
"In tattoos, as with many things, clich� is the enemy of eroticism," Moss says.
He's right, of course. Clich�s are copies of copies of copies, just like all that flash hanging on the wall of the tattoo parlour, all quite safe and familiar. Sexy, maybe. "But erotic is a much more loaded concept. You can't bandy it about so easily. You have to make a conscious decision to use it."
By launching the 'c' word into the argument, Brian Moss elevates the discussion to new levels. We can toss 'sexy' around without signifying anything special, whereas 'erotic' makes us sit up and take notice. Erotic wakes a person up because it stirs the organism. It's a dynamic, and quite dictatorial, dispatching chemical shipments from the hormone factory in the brain, waking us up to the potential for a sexual encounter, even if it's with ourselves. For Brian Moss, erotica in tattoo art is far from guaranteed.
"I'm not sure that an erotic tattoo can exist in a vacuum," Moss says. "Part of a tattoo's importance is that it isn't important in itself. On paper, a tattoo design might be erotic, or it might not. But add a human -- the context -- and it becomes a delightfully complex question." It's the sexual energy emanating from the person that's responsible for making the tattoo 'erotic', according to Moss.
Photo by Brian Moss


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