Inked Mag Staff
May 19th, 2017
Portuguese Museum Displays Strips of Tattooed Human Skin
It Actually Isn’t as Creepy as It Sounds Although views on tattoos were at their most putrid levels in the early 1990s, plenty of people were still basking in ink.…
It Actually Isn’t as Creepy as It Sounds
Although views on tattoos were at their most putrid levels in the early 1990s, plenty of people were still basking in ink. With the popular misconception that the art of tattoo was reserved for the lowest of lowest in society – like criminals, low-lives, circus folks and ladies of the night – folks who were neither of the aforementioned opted to hide their marked skins. Little did they know that, almost a millennia later, crowds of people would be standing in front of a museum display ogling over their tattooed skins.
The MUDE museum in Lisbon, Portugal, proudly debuted “O Mais Profundo é a Pele” (translated into “The Deepest Thing is Skin”), an exhibit displaying 61 crystal encasements of tattooed human skin from people of the early 1900s with bios to go along with each skin of the person who once bore the tattoo.

Editor's Picks
The Ultimate Jurassic World Tattoo Roundup: Just in Time for the New Film
With our fan-familiar dinos back on the big screen, the excitement of the newly released Jurassic World: Rebirth has brought the prehistoric to the present, one tattoo at a time.
Inked & Adorable: Meet Hunter, the Artist Tattooing Labubus One Toy at a Time
What started as a fun surprise for his boyfriend has turned into one of the most unexpected and addictive trends in the tattoo world.
The Story Behind Nonlee’s Signature Tattoo Style
Nonlee Ink merges fine art with tattooing in a style she calls “Realistic Impressionism”.