Vyvyn Lazonga | |
Other Names: | Madame Lazonga[1] |
Birth Name: | Beverly Bean |
Birth Date: | day=18 month=03 year=1947 |
Birth Place: | Seattle, WA[2] |
Known For: | Tattoo artist |
Vyvyn Lazonga is a tattoo artist who began her career in Seattle in the early 1970s and was trained by Danny Danzl. She was the first woman to work for herself in the industry, not her husband or another male shop owner.[3] She worked in San Francisco and was tattooed by Ed Hardy in the 70s. She won the award for Best Tattooed Female in 1978 for his work. Later she was fortunate enough to meet Horiyoshi II at one of Lyle Tuttle's parties before returning in 1989 to open her studio in Seattle.
She has advocated the use of tattoos to cover mastectomy scars as an aid to recovery.[4]
When she began tattooing, there were very few women who had tattoos, not to mention who were working as tattoo artists. When she opened her studio in 1979, there were only a few women tattooing on the west coast.[5] She had a difficult time being treated as an equal in her craft and acquiring a full apprenticeship.[6] Her work opened many doors for women in the tattoo industry, and is still seen as an example of a fine artist working in the tattoo medium. She was also a pioneer in the use of large-scale full-body tattoos in the West. Victoria Lautman has cited her as an artist who helped "to shift tattoos away from fashionable little rainbows, flowers, and unicorns to the larger, fine-arts-related custom designs."[7]
She was also heavily tattooed at a time when it was unusual to see women with major tattoo work outside of sideshows. Asked about the public's perception of her full-sleeve tattoos, she said "I always felt strong and powerful about it, and I still do. But I try to keep my arms covered if I'm taking care of business -- I sorta wear a uniform according to what I'm doing. I want to get my business done quickly and easily, and I don't like having any hindrance or prejudice against me" (Vale and Juno 1989:125).
In her words:
Lazonga has been featured in many magazines and books[5] [6] [7] [8] and currently writes columns for various tattoo magazines, including a regular column in Skin and Ink.[9] She has also won numerous awards, including the artist's choice award at the 2005 National Tattoo Association convention.[10] She still owns and operates her own studio in a historic building in the Pike Place market, in Seattle.
2015 "100 Years of Tattoos," by David McComb, Laurence King Publishing Ltd 2015 "World Atlas of Tattoo," by Anna Felicity Friedman, Yale University Press 2014 Stylist Magazine, "Vyvyn Lazonga: La Première á Avoir Jeté L'encre," May Issue 2014 Tätowier Magazine, "Kosmetische Tätowierungen," January Issue 2010 "Inked," Inked Scene, Interview, April Issue 2010 Tattoo Flash, "The Time of Her Life," July Issue 2010 Skin Art, "Lessons from a Legend," Issue #130 2007 Tattoo Magazine, "Vyvyn Lazonga," April Issue #221 2007 San Francisco Gate, Interview: "Finding My Religion," February 20 Issue 2006 Skin & Ink 2006 Tattoo Magazine 2006-2008 Skin & Ink, Staff Writer 2005 Venus Zine, Summer Issue 2005 Tattoo Magazine 2005 Total Tattoo Magazine, August Issue 2004 The Market News, August Issue 2004 Tattoo Flash 2002 "Tattoo Road Trip," by Bob Baxter, Schiffer Publishing 2002 International Tattoo Art Magazine, "Vyvyn Lazonga: In a Studio All Her Own," November Issue 2002 New York Times, Sunday Style Section, December Issue 1998-1999, The Tattooist's Yearbook, Milano, Italy 1998-1999, CNN Broadcast, "Women of the Ink" 1998 "Bodies of Subversion," by Margo Mifflin, Powerhouse Books 1998 International Tattoo Magazine 1998 Skin & Ink 1996 "New Tattoo," by Victoria Lautman, Abbeville Press 1996 Skin Art 1996 Tattoo Magazine 1993 Tattoo Magazine 1993 Skin Art
1991 Elle Magazine 1989 RE/search, "Modern Primitives," by Andrea Juno & V. Vale, Issue #12 1988 Marks of Civilization, Museum of Cultural History, Los Angeles, CA 1977 "The Tattooists," by Albert L. Morse, San Francisco, CA 1976 Esquire Magazine