PublishedPrestel, November 2019 |
ISBN9783791358963 |
FormatHardcover, 128 pages |
Dimensions25.2cm × 32.7cm × 1.8cm |
The original work of Christian Warlich, Europe's preeminent tattoo artist in the first half of the 20th century, is brought back to life in a stunning new volume. Christian Warlich was a world famous German tattooist and his flash book is one of the most coveted objects in the tattoo world.
It is now available in this exquisite edition that includes over three hundred hand-drawn designs restored to their original vibrant state. It also includes photographs and other archival material, much of which has never been published before. This book brings Warlich's career into new focus, reflecting the latest research on how his early years at sea may have influenced his work. Intricate renderings of cowboys and indigenous Americans, Chinese dragons and Japanese geishas, daggers, snakes, and skulls reveal not only Warlich's influence in the iconography of tattoos, but also suggest the interplay of ideas with tattooists across Europe, North America, and Asia. The book also explores how the art of tattooing was reframed during the Nazi era and how Warlich's estate helped shape the state of tattoo art today. This elegant book is invaluable in understanding the importance of Warlich to the history of tattooing. AUTHOR: Ole Wittmann is an art historian and curator specialising in the art of the tattoo. SELLING POINTS: . Christian Warlich (1891 - 1964) was a Hamburg based tattooist who professionalised tattooing in Germany. He supposedly was the first one to use an electric tattoo machine in Germany. In over 40 years of working as a tattooist he had more than 50,000 customers, including Prince Axel and Prince Viggo from the Danish royal family. . This book shows Warlich's original flashbook of about 300 tattoo designs. . This is the first time Warlich's flashbook has been published since the 1980s and this edition has outstanding quality reproductions. . This book accompanies an exhibition at the Museum fur Hamburgische Geschichte from November 27, 2019 to Spring 2020. 363 colour illustrations