Tattoos back in vogue an Cuba relaxes

A tattoo artist plies his trade in Havana.
A tattoo artist plies his trade in Havana.

HAVANA, Cuba – Bent in concentration beneath the vaulted ceiling of his Old Havana studio, Mauro Coca draws a tropical bird in blue ink down the length of Julivic Marquez’s arm.
“That’s really good,” the 21-year-old art student says, and Coca presses his electric needle to her forearm.
She winces as the needle buzzes across her skin, inking the first centimetres of what will take nine hours to become a red, blue and green quetzal, the brilliantly colored national bird of Guatemala.
During the sinful heydays of the 1950s, tattoos were for the sailors prowling Havana’s waterfront and boozy tourists lurching from sex shows to gambling dens. The socialist revolution drove tattooing even further underground, with health inspectors and police raiding studios seen as health hazards and vestiges of capitalist immorality.
Now skin art is on the rebound in Cuba, with hundreds of tattoo parlours operating largely unmolested across the country.
The studio where Coca works, La Marca, or The Brand, is the most salient example of Cuba’s new acceptance of tattooing. The studio sits on two floors of a refurbished colonial building in the middle of Old Havana, the government-restored heart of the city, giving it the clear if tacit endorsement of the City Historian’s Office, the agency overseeing every aspect of development in Havana’s most important tourist attraction.
La Marca opened a year ago on one of Old Havana’s busiest streets and has done some 600 tattoos for a mix of Cuban and foreign clients. It’s been used as a space for government-sponsored art events and its managers say they’ve never had any trouble with the state despite their lack of a license explicitly permitting tattooing.
Like so many other activities in Cuba, tattooing is neither illegal nor explicitly permitted and regulated, leaving it operating in the grey area Cubans refer to as “alegal,” meaning simply that something lacks any legal status, positive or negative.
And like so many other goods, tattooing supplies can’t be purchased from state businesses, meaning ink, needles and other goods must be imported in travellers’ luggage.