Skin in the game: Hong Kong protesters get inked

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Police officers point their sidearms at protesters during violent clashes in Tseun Wan. Photo: AFP

As a tattooist’s black ink fills 
the petals of Hong Kong’s Bauhinia flower on her upper thigh, ‘C’ says the indelible act of rebellion will forever serve as a reminder of the city’s summer of defiance.

Police officers point their sidearms at protesters during violent clashes in Tseun Wan. Photo: AFP

“I’ll remember this year; I decided to stand up to fight for my freedom,” said the finance worker who asked to be identified only by an initial. From umbrellas and Chinese calligraphy, to gas masks and 
helmets, people are getting their bodies inked as a sign of 
solidarity.

The Bauhinia flower is the emblem of Hong Kong and normally coloured red, but is represented in black in C’s tattoo as a mark of the troubles clouding the city.

The five stars on the flower’s petals, which usually represent China and its ruling Communist Party, are also missing — a move commonly made by Hong Kongers who want to separate their identity from the mainland. Since June when the protests erupted, tattoo studios have received a surge in requests for protest-related artworks.

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They include a so-called 
ambigram that from one angle reads “Hong Kong” and from another “add oil” — a Cantonese expression of encouragement. “Tattooing is an action to
 show that you have control 
over your own body,” said Iris Lam, a 28-year-old tattooist.

One of Lam’s clients had requested a full sleeve tattoo depicting scenes of Hong Kong’s demonstrations but decided to hold off until the protests are over. “He doesn’t want to get hit 
by tear gas with a big wound 
on his body,” she explained.

Many protests have seen 
violent clashes with police 
using tear gas and rubber 
bullets, and hardcore 
demonstrators throwing bricks and molotov cocktails. The crisis began with 
protests against plans to allow extraditions of suspects to 
mainland China, then morphed into a broad pro-democracy campaign. The magnitude of the 
ongoing protests is what has brought people together, said Vincent Yau, another Hong 
Kong tattoo artist.

“A lot of people want to 
commemorate this,” Yau said. Yau said his studio had 
been doing most of the tattoos 
for free. “It’s our way of supporting 
this movement.

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Art is power to spread an idea or inspire people,” she said. Lam is also involved in 
creating Hong Kong pro-democracy propaganda posters and art. Asked if she feared repercussions f, Lam was unfazed. “No,” she shrugged. “I can still tattoo from jail.” — AFP

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