West Virginia Tattoo Expo Adds Second Weekend To Annual Event

Each summer for a decade, the West Virginia Tattoo Expo has brought artists and enthusiasts to Morgantown to celebrate body art. This year, the convention has added a second weekend which took place April 14 – April 16.

It’s just after noon at the Waterfront Marriott on the first day of the first annual West Virginia Spring Tattoo Expo. Each summer for a decade, the West Virginia Tattoo Expo has brought artists and enthusiasts to Morgantown to celebrate body art. This year, the convention added a second weekend which took place April 14 – April 16.

Artist Jacob Gordon is wasting no time in getting started on his client’s tattoo. His client today goes by the name of Bond.

“Yeah, like James Bond,” he said.

Bond is getting a jellyfish tattooed on his bicep, and although Gordon’s modern pneumatic tattoo machine makes no noise, the buzz of more traditional rotary and coil machines is already filling the air early in the day.

Gordon, a Morgantown-based tattoo artist, said he loves tattoo conventions for the opportunity to come together and learn from other artists, and would support having a tattoo convention every month if possible.

“All of it collectively kind of goes to pushing tattooing a little further in its journey, to maybe make it a little less taboo than it’s been in the past,” he said.

Rocco Cunningham, the convention’s event promoter and organizer, agrees. He said that the expo is not only an opportunity to network and see new friends, but more importantly to keep learning about the art and craft of tattooing.

“I was told by an older tattooer very early in my career that the day that you stop learning is the day that you need to just hang it up,” Cunningham said. “This gives the opportunity to see every facet of tattooing, every style of tattooing, and there’s always something to learn and take from every experience, from every expo.”

He attributed the event’s continued success, which has allowed it to expand into a second weekend, in no small part to Morgantown and the communal effort it takes to put on each expo. That includes help that comes from the city as well as the Monongalia County Health Department. 

Cunningham also acknowledges that a drastic change in cultural attitudes towards tattoos in recent years plays a role in the event’s success.

“It’s changed quite a bit, and it’s been enjoyable to see that transformation,” he said. “Tattoos are so much more widely acceptable, and less taboo than they were 20-30 years ago.”

A row of presenters and artists at the Spring West Virginia Tattoo Expo, April 14, 2023. Credit: Chris Schulz/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

Cunningham said the interest for the new convention date, which brought in artists from as far afield as Los Angeles and South America, was just as high as the annual August event.

“We have over 200 tattoo artists here this weekend, which is pretty similar to our August show. The majority of the tattooers want to do both events,” he said. “We have something special going on, we’ve built a family environment amongst the tattooers and the facility and the town, but everybody just loves coming back to Morgantown every year.”

Walking around and talking to artists, family is a word you hear repeated. Artist Amy Lefebvre from Maryland said she had been on a waiting list for the West Virginia Tattoo Expo for years because of the event’s reputation amongst artists.

“I’ve always heard it’s a really good convention. I’ve heard it’s very hard to get into. I felt very lucky to be invited,” she said. “Everybody’s really chill and very nice, and it feels like family and not so competitive.”

Lefebvre said the setting doesn’t hurt either, neither for herself nor for prospective clients.

“I think it’s beautiful out here,” she said. “Also for a client, coming into a convention could almost be less intimidating than walking into a tattoo shop. They can learn and see, I think for a lot of people the unknown is the scary part.”

Client Devin Jones said she couldn’t agree more. The criminology major at West Virginia University said she came to the convention to take advantage of the variety on offer.

“This chance to come here and see all the artists from all over the place was really unique,” Jones said. “You got to see a little bit of everyone’s tattoo styles. The guy that just tattooed me, he’s from Philly. I also talked to a guy that was from North Carolina. It’s really cool to just see everyone come together here.”

Jones said she is already planning a return in August. 

“Even if I’m not coming to get a tattoo, it’s still really cool to walk around,” she said.

Celebrating Body Art And Our Song Of The Week On This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, each summer for a decade, the West Virginia Tattoo Expo has brought artists and enthusiasts to Morgantown to celebrate body art. This year, the convention has added a second weekend. Reporter Chris Schulz spent some time at the event.

On this West Virginia Morning, each summer for a decade, the West Virginia Tattoo Expo has brought artists and enthusiasts to Morgantown to celebrate body art. This year, the convention has added a second weekend. Reporter Chris Schulz spent some time at the event.

Also, in this show, our Mountain Stage Song of the Week comes to us from Chuck Prophet. We listen to his performance of “Willie Mays Is Up At Bat,” which comes from his 2012 album Temple Beautiful. This performance also marked Prophet’s tenth appearance on Mountain Stage.

West Virginia Morning is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting which is solely responsible for its content.

Support for our news bureaus comes from Concord University and Shepherd University.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Charleston Area Medical Center and Marshall Health.

West Virginia Morning is produced with help from Bill Lynch, Caroline MacGregor, Curtis Tate, Chris Schulz, Emily Rice, Eric Douglas, Liz McCormick, Randy Yohe, and Shepherd Snyder.

Eric Douglas is our news director. Caroline MacGregor is our assistant news director and producer.

Teresa Wills and Chuck Anziulewicz are our hosts.

Listen to West Virginia Morning weekdays at 7:43 a.m. on WVPB Radio or subscribe to the podcast and never miss an episode. #WVMorning

How to Celebrate West Virginia's 151st Birthday

I crawled out of bed this morning at 4:30. 

I’m not bragging, I had to come in to host the morning newscasts and West Virginia Morning.

But I woke up feeling good. ‘It’s West Virginia Day, after all’ I thought to myself as I was getting ready, doing my best not to crawl back into bed and wind up late for work. 

I can’t lie, the first thought as I was waking up wasn’t how to solve the state’s problems, or how to get West Virginia out of dead last in many national rankings. 

Honestly, my first thought was how terribly I wished I could stop by Tudor’s Biscuit World and grab a Thundering Herd or a Ron on my way into work. Nothing would be more West Virginian of me while starting my day.

Sadly, though, the Tudor’s on the East End of Charleston opens at 5:30. I was in the newsroom prepping newscasts just after 5.

On days like today when I fill in for news director Beth Vorhees, I get the opportunity to watch the world wake up. It comes to life in a stream of social media posts as people start their days. It’s strange sometimes, but today it has been awfully fun and rather sentimental. 

Today, the beautiful state where I was born, raised, and where I still reside is 151 years old. And even though she has her issues, I think she still looks pretty good.

And since we still have a full day ahead of us, here are some ideas on how to celebrate our home,  West Virginia:

Swing by the Culture Center in Charleston

Check out some of the exhibits they’re launching. If you missed last year’s 3-D projection onto the Capitol, you’ll want to check it out in the theater downstairs of that building.

FestivALL

For the next 10 days, Charleston will become a melting pot of arts and culture with FestivALL. Everything from live music, to performance art, art workshops and fairs and more. Might as well get out and get started today.

Learn Some West Virginia History

You could celebrate by immersing yourself in the state’s rich history, through documentaries like last year’s radio special West Virginia 150: Commemorating Statehood or the Emmy-nominated television piece West Virginia: The Road to Statehood.

Drink a Locally Brewed Beer 

West Virginia’s craft brew industry has grown significantly in recent years. Festivals like Mountain State Brewing Company’s Brew Skies Festival, or Huntington’s Rales & Ales are still a few weeks away. But, there’s plenty of places all over the state to enjoy a great, locally brewed craft beer. Some of my favorites include:

  • Bridge Brew Works (Fayetteville) –  Long Point Lager
  • Charleston Brewing Company – Mountain Stage Ale
  • The North End Tavern (Parkersburg) – 5-Way IPA
  • Mountain State Brewing Co. (Thomas & Morgantown) – Seneca IPA

Get a West Virginia Tattoo

If you’re really hardcore about your love for West Virginia and want to show your pride like I do, you could get your body permanently etched with something related to the Mountain State. A cardinal or a rhododendron might work well. You could go with the state seal. Or you could keep it simple like I did with the state’s border. (Trust me, I didn’t have the idea first!) If you’re looking for a recommendation, Tat-Nice in Huntington and New Hope in Barboursville both do excellent work.

Now matter how you celebrate, though, make it a good one. 

As an added bonus, here’s some some outpouring of West Virginia pride I witnessed this morning as the state “woke up” on social media:  

[View the story “West Virginian’s 151st Birthday” on Storify]

1st annual WV Tattoo Expo kicks off in Morgantown

Tattoo artists and ink-fanatics alike traveled from all over the country to the first ever WV Tattoo Expo in Morgantown Oct. 11-13, 2013.

Credit Glynis Board
/

Tattoo contests, a Miss Tattooed West Virginia competition, and tattooing seminars were among the featured events at the expo.

“Right now we are in the main event room of the Morgantown Event Center. We have over 150 tattoo artists doing their thing,” says Rocco Cunningham, a tattoo artist from Clarksburg and organizer of the weekend event.

“Right now there’re people everywhere looking at artwork, looking through portfolios, sitting in chairs getting tattooed, waiting to get their tattoos. Everybody’s excited. The atmosphere is outstanding.”

Luna Alba travelled from Northern Virginia when she heard about the expo and is getting tattooed for the 10th time.

“Honestly, I find it pretty therapeutic after a while, because the adrenalin just kind of goes through your whole body. After the first maybe 20 minutes, it’s kind of relaxing,” she says with a wince as the needle starts working.  “It’s pretty painful,” she admits. “It’s on my hip. So, yeah. It’s pretty bad.”

Alba’s tattoo artist is well-known. Rick Cherry. He’s been drawing permanent art on bodies for 43 years.

“I got my first professionally-done tattoo in Washington DC, when I was 14 years old,” Cherry remembers. “I was hooked, I had to do it. I was convinced that I was going to have to learn how to do it.”

Cherry also sells his own hand-made tattooing equipment. He says it’s a dying art, but he’s passionate about machining his own drills.

“In my shop at my house I have milling machines, I have lathes, I have welders. I have to cut out all the metal, braise it together. The coils that operate the machine—I cut the cores for them, I hand wrap the electrical wire, solder everything together. Hand-cut springs. The only thing I don’t make are the screws and the washers. ”

Hundreds of people came out to the event in Morgantown. Men and women, young and old.

“What we really wanted to do was try to represent the tattoo community the best we could and also represent the state of WV the best we could,” Cunningham says. “We have the opportunity to meet a lot of great artists and a lot of great people and to promote the art form. Tattooing is the most ancient form of art in the world.”

Exit mobile version