The Passion of Christo; Convict’s art changes his conviction

By Jonathan Baca, Copy Editor | Photos Provided by Eric Christo Martinez

martinez

From Albuquerque’s mean streets, to a six-by-nine foot cell in a federal prison, to the walls of the Albuquerque Museum, the life of local artist and former student Eric Christo Martinez has been one of inspiration and conviction.

After honing his artistic skills and craft behind bars, Martinez has emerged as a suc­cessful painter and tattoo artist, and now he is working to give back to the community, teach­ing kids and convicts that art can be a powerful release from the harsh realities of life.

Martinez struggled with crime and drug addiction from an early age, and at the age of 22 he was convicted of a drug crime and was sentenced to 10 years in federal prison, he said.

In prison, he quickly dis­covered that he had a talent for drawing and he begin making paños, a classic form of prison art consisting of intricate drawings done on handker­chiefs, he said.

“It was a pastime, but also something I really started developing a love and a passion for. So I just kept drawing and draw­ing and it grew and grew,” Martinez said.

Then he was put into solitary confinement for six months, and he discov­ered that drawing was a powerful means of escape, spending countless hours practicing and honing his craft, he said.

Eventually, people began to notice how good his art was, and started asking if he would give them tattoos, he said.

Tattooing in jail is a unique skill, and Martinez quickly learned the tech­niques, building his first tattoo machines out of motors taken out of radios and sharpened guitar strings, and making his own ink from soot and baby oil, he said.

“I started out with fine line black-and-grey prison style, a style that has a lot of history. It was born behind bars, and it spilled out onto the streets and is really popular now, and it revolutionized tattoo art,” Martinez said.

Martinez was eventu­ally moved to a prison in Pennsylvania, where he was introduced to fine art and painting by another inmate, Hendrick Gil, who began men­toring him and teaching him the craft of painting, he said.

He also began devouring every book on art that he could get his hands on, learning the history and techniques of past masters from all different styles, he said.

“I do a little bit of every­thing, all styles. Whatever challenges me or takes me to a new place, it’s all about the art and growing as an artist, so I love new challenges and styles,” Martinez said.

Soon painting became Martinez’s main outlet, and he decided that he wanted to try his hand at becoming a pro­fessional artist when he was released, he said.

He was set free in 2010, and by then he had created an entire series of paintings titled “Conviction,” based on his time in prison, he said.

He got a few paintings into his first gallery show, and one of them, a self-portrait titled “The Passion of Christo,” was purchased and eventually displayed at the Albuquerque Museum, he said.

Since then, Martinez has made a successful career as a tattoo artist and painter, tat­tooing full time at Factory Edge in Coronado Mall, and he is currently working on designs for a new clothing line, he said.

Martinez said he has also been involved in outreach work for prisoners and kids in the juvenile justice system, showing them that art, culture and creativity can be a way out of a life of crime, drug abuse and prison.

“Being able to give back and share the art and my experiences, especially with the youth, is important to me because I lost my brother, and me and a lot of friends; we’ve been through a lot, so if I can inspire and plant some seeds, it means a lot to me,” Martinez said.

For more information on the art of Eric Christo Martinez, visit ericchristoart. zenfolio.com.

From overseas to Albuquerque; Dorian’s shades of Gray

By Nick Stern, Senior Reporter | Photos courtesy of Dorian Grey
Dorian Grey

Computer Sciences major Dorian Gray is a professional tattoo artist who works at Ace’s Tattoo and Body Piercing located at 2737 San Mateo NE, she said.

She has been a profes­sional tattoo artist for three years and believes it is one of the most rewarding experi­ences she has ever gotten out of life, Gray said.

“I absolutely love my job because it is really creative, I get to meet thousands of new people, and I get to cover the world in beautiful art,” she said.

The style of art she is best at and loves to do the most is Japanese, which she would do all day if her clients would let her, she said.

The name Dorian Gray comes from a joke that some­one made about her never aging, and is a reference to Oscar Wilde’s “The Picture of Dorian Gray” about a man who never ages while a portrait of himself ages more and more, she said.

Gray already has her Bachelor’s degree in illustra­tion that she got from the Northern Illinois University and she is currently attend­ing CNM courses in order to knock out all of the coursework that she can before transferring to UNM in the fall semester of 2014, she said.

CNM has helped her in both her pursuit of a Master’s in Computer Science and also helped her with her career in tattoos, she said.

Gray said her time at the Montoya campus has been sur­prisingly very educational and she has been taking math and a couple programming classes, which have helped her learn how to create databases, and as far as tattooing goes, the people that she has met around the campus community have been very cool and interested in what she does which has inspired her to keep up her hard work.

“I think CNM is a really great school. I went to a com­munity college outside of Chicago where I am from and I thought the educational qual­ity was pretty bad, but CNM is actually really good and I was really surprised and happy. The math classes are actually really great,” Gray said.

After Gray graduated with her first bachelor’s degree she said she moved to Japan for three years where she apprenticed and started to study the way that tattooing is done there. Then she went to Melbourne, Australia where she also did a year-long appren­ticeship in tattooing which was hard work and required some serious dedication and tough­ening up.

Gray said she is respon­sible for doing everything and anything that needed to get done around the shop like cleaning, getting other artists food, scrubbing everything, and when the artists eventu­ally had free time, they would teach her how to tattoo.

“It is pretty hard work and is kind of like boot camp where everyone is hazing you and it really toughens you up, but it is really good training and you do all your medical certifications too,” she said.

Gray said that with her apprenticeship and her three years of professional tattooing, she has probably done around 2,000 different tattoos and she believes it is an honor and priv­ilege to help so many people along the transformative pro­cess that is tattooing, she said.

Ace’s Tattoo and Body Piercing is open from Monday through Thursday from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. and Friday and Saturday from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sundays are also available by appointment and the shop can be contacted via email at info@acestattooabq. com or by phone at 872-8287, Gray said.