Archive for November, 2011

A Stranger A Day

Mar­i­anela Ramos Capelo pulls up the leg of her jeans to show her right ankle. “Excuse my hairy leg,” she cau­tions, as she reveals a 3-inch tat­too: one con­tin­u­ous line that forms the out­line of a dog pulled length-wise. “It’s a line draw­ing of a weiner dog. It’s based on a Picasso draw­ing,” she explains. Picasso’s sim­ple sketch was a love let­ter to a Daschund named Lump; Capelo’s ren­di­tion is a trib­ute to her child­hood pet: “He was my best buddy grow­ing up. The best mem­o­ries that I have with my fam­ily are with that dog there. He was amaz­ing. That was the first one.”

Photo: Mar­i­anela Ramos Capelo

Capelo has three tat­toos: she has another on her left wrist, and a third on her left bicep. She tells me the story behind each one, and then reveals that a year ago, she had no tat­toos. It’s pos­si­ble, then, that the year-long art project she just com­pleted might have swayed her to get a lit­tle ink.

Nearly every­day since Sep­tem­ber 2010, Capelo, a 22-year-old com­mu­ni­ca­tion arts stu­dent, has been ask­ing strangers about their tat­toos. In the hopes of over­com­ing and under­stand­ing her shy­ness, she chal­lenged her­self to talk to 365 strangers. Capelo approached peo­ple in cafés, on cam­pus and on Com­mer­cial Drive, where she lives, ask­ing them to show her a tat­too and tell her the story behind it. With an iPhone and a smile, she found 420 peo­ple who let her take a photo of their body art and share the gen­e­sis story on her blog, A Stranger A Day (astrangeraday.tumblr.com).

In July, she cap­tured a vividly coloured por­trait of Karma that stretched from a man’s armpit to his hip (he got it just for art’s sake). Last Octo­ber, she pho­tographed a dot of ink below a woman’s eye (the stranger wanted to remem­ber the tears she had shared with her hus­band). The tat­toos vary, but Capelo dis­cov­ered “some­thing really beau­ti­ful” in the rela­tion­ship all the strangers had with the art on their skin. “It’s hard to get some­one to say some­thing pos­i­tive about their bod­ies,” she says. Not very many peo­ple say, ‘Oh look at my nose! Look at my fin­gers!’ But with tat­toos, it’s very easy.”

On Octo­ber 24, she posted her final photo, and cried. “I was done! I was just really happy. But that was about 30 sec­onds and then it was onto the show.” Less than two weeks later, she and three friends drew about 200 Van­cou­verites to a tiny, nar­row art gallery on East Geor­gia Street to show the com­plete work. It was almost impos­si­ble to walk through the room and take in the images and sto­ries; the gallery was packed with bod­ies. Atten­dees were wait­ing out­side before the show even started at 7 p.m., many of whom were the inked strangers from her web­site. They’d heard about the one-night exhibit on CBC Radio or read about it on the blog Van­cou­ver is Awe­some and came to see their pic­ture on the walls. “It was really cool,” the artist says. “One of my main goals of the show was to reach out to the strangers, and for them to see what they were a part of, because it was all about them.”

Each stranger’s tat­too gave Capelo a doc­u­ment of a mean­ing­ful encounter. “A few strangers came by and I couldn’t remem­ber their faces. But they would show me their tat­too and I would say, ‘I remem­ber every­thing about you now!’ And I would. I would remem­ber where they were and who they were with.” As Capelo has learned, tattoos—or even pic­tures of them—make indeli­ble mem­o­ries and mem­o­ries indeli­ble. When a per­son gets a tat­too, she says, they’re choos­ing to put a story or image on them for the rest of their lives. No mat­ter the cir­cum­stances of get­ting the tat­too, good or bad, “It’s a mem­ory they don’t regret.”