Utah Jazz tattoo art
看板UTAH-JAZZ (猶他 爵士)作者RonnieBrewer (Reverse Layup)時間19年前 (2007/05/28 13:51)推噓4(4推 0噓 2→)留言6則, 4人參與討論串1/1
Like many athletes, Jazz players say tattoos are ...
Drawing on some Individuality
By Lya Wodraska
The Salt Lake Tribune
Article Last Updated: 05/27/2007 08:24:09 AM MDT
The history of tattoos goes back centuries as symbols of strength, religious
conviction and cultural alliances. The Greeks tattooed spies with their ranks.
Romans permanently marked criminals and slaves. In Hawaii, traditional kakau
assured good health and spiritual well-being.
Body art has found its own followers in the modern era, particularly in
sports, where athletes often use tattoos as a sort of personal talisman, a
way to create identity in a sport where individual character is diminished in
favor of team uniformity.
Some estimates have placed the number of tattooed athletes in the NBA
above 70 percent. And the Utah Jazz are no different. Here's what some
players say about their body art.
Much of Carlos Boozer's upper body is covered in tattoos. Most are by
Mister Cartoon, a well-known Los Angeles artist who has worked on such celebs
as Eminem, Justin Timberlake and 50 Cent.
Boozer has a detailed grizzly bear on his left arm, a tribute to his home
state of Alaska and a nod to his own "beast unleashed." Underneath it is an
angel's eye in honor of his wife. His right arm bears an image of himself
with Mount Juneau and the city's skyline in the background. The left side of
his body is dark, representing temptation, while the right has a cross and a
basketball. His arm also bears the words of Philippians 4:13: "I can do
everything through him who gives me strength."
What fans can't see are the cross on his chest and the angel on his back,
which took nearly eight hours to complete. Boozer plans to add more detail in
the future.
"If it's going on my body, I'm going to put a lot of thought into it," he
said.
Rookie Dee Brown has several tattoos on his upper body, but his quick
playing style is signified in his tattooed nickname "One man fastbreak,"
while a large tattoo that covers his back reads "God is my judge."
"I never see that one, so sometimes I forget I have it," he said.
Rafael Araujo probably has caught the most grief for his tattoos. He got
some of them while a student at Brigham Young University, an honor-code
violation. He also risked disapproval in his native country of Brazil.
"If you have a tattoo there, they think you are a bad guy," he said.
"For me, it shows who you are and it shows your character."
Among his tattoos are the word "determination" and his wife's name, Cheyenne,
in Chinese. His left bicep is the canvas for a large shark with a basketball
in its mouth and a half-basketball/half-world cradled in God's hand. "It's
what I do and I'm obviously blessed with what I do," said Araujo.
Some players, like Matt Harpring, have no tattoos. Others keep them simple.
Mehmet Okur has a "Y" tattooed between the thumb and index finger of his left
hand for his wife, Yeliz. "I got this one because I love her and I want to
show my appreciation for her," he said.
Derek Fisher used the Chinese characters for "faithful" and "heart, mind and
spirit" on the underside of his right forearm. "At least that is what I was
told they mean," he said. "Hopefully I won't find out it's actually something
offensive."
http://www.sltrib.com/jazz/ci_5996007
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