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Kanahus in water

TATAU

Freedom | Identity | Memory

Upcoming exhibition: June 27, 2026 – January 10, 2027

TATAU – Freedom | Identity | Memory

Tattoos are one of humanity’s oldest forms of expression - a language inscribed on the skin, an archive of memories, identity, and belonging. In this exhibition we gaze at tattooed women from around the world. Through photographs and stories, you will meet women who carry their history on their skin as marks of pride, tradition, and resistance.

The word “tattoo” derives from the Tahitian word “tatau,” which means “to mark” or “to strike.” Regardless of what tattoos are called - deq, sicanje, ming, titi, tunniit - they carry meanings that extend far beyond the aesthetic. They reveal who you are and can protect, heal, and mark transitions in one’s life.

Tatau – Freedom, Identity and Memory is a tribute to women’s stories etched in ink on the body. The exhibition shows how ancient traditions have regained their power, and how women continue to wear their identity on their skin and mark their place in the world.

Exhibition period: June 27, 2026 – January 10, 2027
Produced by: The National Museums of World Culture

 

 

Kanahus in water

Kanahus “Freedom” Manuel

"This tattoo is a warrior tattoo representing the Secwepemc and Ktunaxa mountains, which we are fighting to defend against settler-colonial Canada."

Kanahus “Freedom” Manuel is a well-known Indigenous activist who belongs to the Secwépemc (Shuswap) and Ktunaxa peoples of British Columbia, Canada.


Tattoo by: Naualli Ñuu Savi 
Photo by: Cody Lucich

Place: Kanada

 

Esme Maria with face tattoos

Esme Maria

"I just gave them my face, and they tattooed it."

Like many others of her generation, Esme Maria had her first tattoos done as a young girl. Few old women still wear these tattoos due to the influence of Islam. Esme Maria hopes that this unique and ancient tradition will one day return and be accepted again.

Photographer: Michael Zomer

Place: Tunisien 

Eva with her traditional tattoos

Eva Balažin

"My project, Traditional Croatian Tattoos, is deeply meaningful to me. It has pushed me to face the shared trauma of my people and transform it through creativity and connection."

Eva Balažin is the founder of the project Traditional Croatian Tattoos. The project is working with documenting and recreating the traditional motifs from Croatia and Bosnia Herzegovina.

Photographer: Doris Fatur

Place: Kroatien

Teruria showing her back tattoos

Teruria Taimāna

"My tattoos are a form of living heritage. Each motif represents a phase of my life - my personal journey, my passions, my children, and my family ties. They are a way of remembering where personal stories and collective tradition coexist on the same living surface."

The tattoo on Teruria’s back tells a story of fertility and femininity. The motif is traditionally associated with creation and abundance, reflecting the ability to give life. 

Photographer: Stéphane Maillon

Place: Tahiti

Elcim showing her tattoo from the lip to her heart

Elcim “Superturken” Yilmaz

I had the sudden urge for having a tattoo on my body. I have to have a red line, I thought. And it has to run from my lip to my heart. Twenty minutes after I’d said those words, I had the tattoo on my body.

Elcim’s red line was done in 2018, two days before she was due to organise a major concert at Globen in Stockholm for the first time. She was on the verge of breaking down from stress, worry and anxiety. The tattoo was a way of mending her body.

 

Photographer: Linda Edetun

Place: Sweden

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