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Michi Yaring, 75-80

Yaring was 14 yrs old when she had her nose done and was tattooed at 15 yrs old. When her mother started to tattoo her she screamed a lot and asked to wait until her father came home from the jungle. Yaring said, "five people including her father had to catch her and hold her down". Although it was very painful, she would like the younger girls to take on the responsibility and continue the tradition.

 

When the last tattooed Apatani woman of Arunachal Pradesh passes, the tribe will lay to rest one of the most significant parts of their history and culture–the coming-of-age ritual of nose plugging and facial tattooing, two practices that historically defined what it meant to be an Apatani woman.

 

However, according to the locals of Ziro Valley, the government in the 1970’s banned these practices. Some of the Apatani women expressed their gratitude that the rituals have been banned; they do not want to see younger generations go through the physical pain of plugging one’s nose and tattooing one’s face.

 

The ban represents both the movement towards modernization as well as movement away from what has always been. For as long as history has been passed from generation to generation, to have the plugs and tattoos is to be Apatani. Now, going forward, these women must decide what marks them as being distinct from the surrounding tribes and, really, the rest of the world.

 

Michi Yaring, "To Be An Apatani Woman", Ziro, India. November, 2017.

$2,000.00Price
  • Limited Edition Mounted Print on Sintra Numbered and Signed.

    11x17 Edition of 20

    20x30 Edition of 10

    24x36 Edition of 35

    40x60 Edition of 5

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