Japan\’s Tattoo Boom Thrives Ahead of the Olympics

Japan\’s Tattoo Boom Thrives Ahead of the Olympics

When Ink Meets Tradition: Japan’s Tattoo Tussle

Mana Izumi – The Saucy Surfer in a Bleach‑Blonde Bob

When Mana Izumi got her first tattoo at 18, she wasn’t a rebel, she was a fan of a pop‑diva’s beach‑bronzed “surfer chick” vibe.

  • 29‑year‑old former porn star
  • Copper‑tanned skin, khaki‑tinted tee shirts, and a bleach‑blonde bob
  • Ink covers half her body – an Aztec skull propped on her leg for a fresh $500 (≈S$6)
  • She told AFP, “I wasn’t an Amuro fan, but her tats were so cute.” When her mom saw the ink, tears rolled down her cheeks, and her dad almost slapped her. “I like standing out,” she said with a shrug.

    Tattoos in Japan – The Stained Legacy

    In Japan, tattoos sit on a cultural cliff:

  • Criminal past: In the 17th century, criminals were branded to mark them.
  • Yakuza pride: Today, gangsters use full‑body “irezumi” to swear allegiance.
  • Opposition era: After 1800, Japan outlawed tattoos, fearmongering outsiders would think we were “primitive.”
  • Even royalty secretly got inked because the country’s tattoo artists were world‑renowned.
    By 1948, American occupation lifted the ban, but the stigma stuck around.
    “They see a tattoo and think ‘yakuza’ – they miss the beauty.” – Brian AshcraftPolice sometimes ignore the ban, yet recent raids and fines have left the industry humming with uncertainty.

    The Legal Tightrope – Taiki Masuda’s Warrior Saga

    Osaka artist Taiki Masuda (30) was arrested in 2015 for violating a 70‑year‑old law in the Medical Practitioners’ Act that says only doctors can wield needles.

  • Fine: 300,000 ¥ (≈S$3,600)
  • 2001 Ministry change: Tattooing flagged medical work
  • Battle: Masuda fought; court (last month) overturned his guilty verdict
  • He says, “There’s no legal framework regulating the tattoo industry in Japan. Our livelihoods are at stake.”

    Voices Across the Ink Spectrum

  • Supporters:
  • Noriyuki Katsuta of Save Tattooing in Japan slammed Masuda’s arrest as a human‑rights violation.
  • Expectation: A legal framework that recognises art rather than criminality.
  • Traditionalists:
  • Horiyoshi III defends the underground roots, saying tattoos should keep a dash of outlaw spirit.
  • “Like pepper on noodles: enough spice to wow, but not so much it burns you.”
  • Estimated 500,000–1 million Japanese have tattoos (one in 100–200), yet the governing perspective remains divided.

    Olympics Fever – A Cultural Cross‑Road

    Japan’s squeamishness will be tested amid the 2020 Tokyo Olympics and upcoming Rugby World Cup, hosting foreign athletes adorned in body art.
    “I don’t know how much the Olympics will change opinions,” says Ashcraft. “Japanese TV still blurs out tats.”Cultural prejudice stems from a Confucian belief that defacing the inherited body is disrespectful. Ashcraft notes, “It’s no longer seen as dirty, but the collective consciousness still lingers.”

    Closing Thoughts – Mana’s Call to Self‑Respect

    Mana asserts, “Everyone in my mom’s generation thought a tattoo meant yakuza. The idea that sprouts from spoiling the body handed down by parents still intimidates people. I don’t feel I have to explain myself.”
    In a country where tattoos have danced between forbidden and revered, figures like Mana Izumi and heroes like Ma usu are steering a conversation toward fresh, colorful horizons.