Tattooed ladies were working class women who acquired tattoos and performed in circuses, sideshows, and dime show museums as means for earning a substantial living. At the height of their popularity during the turn of the 20th century, tattooed ladies transgressed Victorian gender norms by showcasing their bodies in scantily clad clothing and earned a salary considerably larger than their male counterparts. Tattooed ladies often used captivity narratives as a means for excusing their appearance, and to tantalize the audience. The popularity of tattooed ladies waned with the onset of television.
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Irene Woodward.jpg
1880s photograph of Irene Woodward, "The Original Tattooed Lady", by Pittsburgh photographer Joseph ...
Lillian Marco, tattooed lady.jpg
C. 1885-1892. photograph of professional tattooed lady Lillian Marco. She performed in circuses and...
María José Cristerna PRIMERA CONVENCIÓN NACIONAL DE TATOOS (cropped).jpg
María José Cristerna Méndez, Mexican lawyer and tattoo artist at the First National Middle of the Wo...
Nora Hildebrandt, by Charles Eisenmann.jpg
Nora Hildebrandt
albumen photograph
ca. 1880
Olive Oatman1 (cropped).jpg
en:Olive Oatman 1838–1903, by Benjamin F. Powelson (1823–1885), Albumen silver print, c. 1863, Natio...