Showing posts with label Comedy and Tragedy Masks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Comedy and Tragedy Masks. Show all posts

Saturday, 10 April 2010

The Tattooed Poets Project: Tameka Mullins

Today's tattooed poet is Tameka Mullins, a poet who blogs at her site Lyric Fire.


Tameka chose this tattoo design because she was a high school drama major and she dreamed of becoming an actress. The tragedy and comedy masks are a popular tattoo design, especially among creative individuals. They have even appeared on Tattoosday before, as seen here and here.

Tameka elaborates:

I actually collected objects (paintings, art masks, etc...) with the thespian symbol over the years because I felt such a connection to the image. As I grew older I realized I loved the symbol so much because to me it summed up life. Happiness, sadness, joy, pain, elation and deflation. These are the emotions that drive us, crush us and propel us and are at the center of almost everything we do. As a writer I look to capture, explore and expand on these emotions in my projects.
After a night out parting with her best friend, Tameka got an ear piercing and this tattoo at Sacred Tattoo in Manhattan.

Tameka is a native Detroiter who loves writing, networking and cultivating great relationships. Her professional background includes work as a public relations professional, radio segment producer, project manager and consultant for publishing and non-profit organizations. She wrote her first poem when she was 5-years-old and it consisted of just two words: "I dream." She believes that with persistence and passion dreams can be transformed into goals which become reality. Her novel Letters to Chyna, which delves into the emotionally charged issues of adoption is currently being reviewed and considered for publication.

Check out one of her poems over on BillyBlog here.

Sunday, 16 August 2009

Laugh Now, Cry Later

I met Rico outside of Madison Square Garden and he offered up this, one of his fifteen tattoos:


There's no real story behind this Comedy and Tragedy mask design. The added banner "Laugh now, cry later" resonates with me as a favorite saying in my family, from my wife's oft-quoted Grandmother Sadie Liss, is "You start out laughing, you end up crying".

Rico just liked the design from Island Avenue Tattoo in Pittsburgh.

Thanks to Rico for sharing his ink with us here on Tattoosday!