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Jagua, A Journey Into Body Art from the Amazon
Jagua, A Journey Into Body Art from the Amazon
Jagua, A Journey Into Body Art from the Amazon
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Jagua, A Journey Into Body Art from the Amazon

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In search of the jagua fruit, author Carine Fabius takes readers on a journey into the deepest realms of the Amazon jungle, where a prized tattoo ink weaves magical tales into the heart and culture of the region's indigenous people.

Written in a breezy, engaging style, the book includes:

- 40 pages of gorgeous color photographs, including contributions by noted documentary photographer and travel writer Cristina Mittermeier
- Over 25 black & white photographs and illustrations
- The author's personal account of her and her artist/explorer husband's journey into the world of temporary body art, beginning with henna and culminating with the discovery of the jagua fruit's promise to deliver a beautiful tattoo that looks real â yet fades after two weeks
- Excerpts from her husband Pascal Giacomini's diary as he travels on a motorized dugout canoe into the deepest reaches of the jungle, where he spends weeks with an indigenous group called the Matsés
- Brief histories of various indigenous groups associated with jagua
- Personal and insightful essays by veteran explorers and lovers of the Amazon
- Information on the medicinal and mystical properties of the jagua fruit
- Magical tales and beliefs surrounding this extraordinary fruit
- A short history of tattoos
- A short history of ink
- Frequently asked questions (and answers, of course!) about jagua tattoos
- Overview of the Amazon, the Indians that populate the area, and issues that currently dominate throughout the region
- Traditional tales from the Amazon
LanguageEnglish
PublishereBookIt.com
Release dateApr 26, 2016
ISBN9780978500320
Jagua, A Journey Into Body Art from the Amazon

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    Jagua, A Journey Into Body Art from the Amazon - Carine Fabius

    are!

    There is a fruit that grows in the lush and steamy verdant jungle of Amazonia that can only be described as noir. Dreamlike, strange, erotic, and cruel—these are some of the terms used in defining the classic film noir genre, and there is a case to be made for the comparison. Imagine a fruit whose innocent green skin belies a buttery yellow center, which yields a transparent liquid resembling fresh water. Smear this juice on your body and, a few hours later, a surreal transformation occurs. Your skin color has metamorphosed to black. Blue-black. Noir. Some might think it erotic; however, it is no stretch to imagine that, in some circles, this might be considered cruel. But relax. It’s not forever. Give it a couple of weeks and you’ll be back to normal....

    The jagua fruit and flower

    Chapter One: Jagua—The Prequel

    THE YELLOW RUBBER GLOVES ARE ON and my splattered apron safeguards my clothes. Spatula in hand, I stand over the noisy whirring of a XXX-size KitchenAid mixer filled with a shiny, viscous black goop when my husband shouts from across the room, Don’t breathe on that!

    I’m not breathing! I say.

    I step away from the mixer and feel a squishing sensation underneath my foot.

    "Oh no! Do you think you could ever one day wipe up a spill when it happens? I ask. Now I’m going to have it all over my foot. Look, it splashed up on my leg too."

    He ignores these comments. He’s too busy pouring jet-black jagua fruit juice from a plastic gallon jug through a funnel and into a sieve in order to make sure any remaining sediment doesn’t make its way into the mix. At the bottom of the jug, it’s all sediment. With a black plastic spoon he pushes the thick stuff through the strainer so that he can gather every last drop of this rare, precious liquid that we like to call black gold. In the process, some of the juice splashes on his chin. No matter the precautions, we always end up looking like we work in the semi-permanent ink business, which, come to think of it, we kinda do. A few minutes later, I pull off my gloves and stare in horror. My hands have turned completely black.

    How did this happen again? I say. How did it do that? Thank God jagua doesn’t stain the nails!

    Wait a minute, haven’t I done this before? Feels like a déjà-vu. Is that the tinkling sound of the opening music to The Twilight Zone I’m hearing...?

    A pot full of brown mud sits simmering atop my oven burner as I race around the kitchen, wet dishrag in hand, working desperately to get the fine film of green powder that has worked its way onto every surface it can find in the room. While one bright orange-stained hand feverishly wipes at the brown spot that refuses to lift off the blond wood table, the other hand, whose nails have not escaped the reddish tint, reaches for ground cloves. I debate in my mind for the hundredth time whether eucalyptus oil would be a better choice. The scent of eucalyptus snakes it way up my nostrils and I take a moment to breathe it in and clear my nasal passages.

    Don’t forget to keep stirring the pot! my husband shouts from across the room. He has been standing over the sink for an hour, pouring the green powder through a fine mesh wire sieve, and is the one responsible for the stuff finding its way into our throats, hair and, I’m sure by now, our pores.

    Should I pour the coffee in now? I shout back, vowing silently to withhold all snarky remarks about his chaotic ways, Or did we decide to go with black tea? Oh, and what about the okra?

    Okra? he says, Aren’t we using indigo?

    What does indigo have to do with okra? I say with disbelief in my voice. Okra is for the consistency, indigo is for the color!

    He ignores the commonsense element of my question and parries with, Let’s go with the walnut hull extract.

    Hell, this glop is looking kind of thick to me right now...think we need to add water?

    Yep, that was us in 1997. Back then, the concoction brewing on the burner was a paste, with the henna plant at its base, that stained the skin a deep reddish brown. Fast forward to 2009 and nothing has changed—except the color scheme. I should be used to this by now.

    The Henna Back Story

    A dozen years ago, my company, Lakaye Studio, introduced henna tattoos to Los Angeles, and the news spread as quickly as the seemingly insatiable desire for real tattoos. Back then, I thought permanent tattoos had reached the height of popularity, but it was only the beginning.

    Some would argue that tattooing is nothing more than a fashion trend, right alongside baggy pants whose waistbands have to fall just under the butt to be in step with the times. Of course, by the time this book comes out, beltless baggies will have gone the way of the fedora—once the rage before baseball caps came along. Wait, you mean fedoras are back? Oh, hell. Thank God I don’t write about style. Maybe I should stop trying to figure out what’s hip, and get back to tattoos, which, as I write this, are still very much in—although I disagree that they are merely fashion accessories (more on this later).

    After all these years, I can still say without hesitation that people love henna and its beautiful, organic reddish-brown color. But a temporary tattoo that looks like a real one has always been extra high on everybody’s wish list, including that of the henna lovers. So, as business owners, my husband and I kept looking for a way to deliver the goods in a painless, all-natural way.

    And then we found out about the jagua fruit. We heard it was an edible fruit from the Amazon, full of medicinal properties, plus the ability to stain the skin blue-black—just like a real tattoo—and then disappear completely in 10–14 days.

    What!?

    It wasn’t easy, but after much investigation, following numerous leads that more often than not brought us to dead ends, sending a hundred emails and making a thousand telephone calls to friends, and friends of friends, and often complete strangers, someone finally put us in contact with an American living in Peru. I’ll call him Mr. X. This Mr. X had had dealings with a number of indigenous groups living in the jungle and, for a negligible fee, he offered to facilitate introductions. A couple of months and multiple conversations later, we decided to dispatch my husband and partner, Pascal Giacomini, on an extended trip to some of the most isolated villages in the world, deep inside the Amazon rainforest where jagua grows.

    Are you going, too?

    That’s what all my friends wanted to know.

    Um, no thanks.

    This journey reminded me of how our Moroccan affair began with the family of farmers who supply us with the henna we use in our Earth Henna Tattoo Kits. Pascal was the one who made the initial trip out to the isolated and inhospitable desert terrain where, before his arrival, the family had only once before in their lives been visited by a foreigner—and she was a scientist on research assignment for a book. I did eventually visit the family, and enjoyed myself tremendously—we were welcomed like royalty, and the stopover included an unforgettable traditional henna session administered by the loving matriarch. However, although I was thankful for the firsthand experience, and have been feeling the call to return, it wasn’t the kind of trip that was high on my wish list. It took a full day’s drive through utterly desolate country to get there (Please don’t let the car die out here, I kept thinking). The conditions are very harsh, with unbearably dry, gusty winds that made it difficult to see and breathe. There was no running water, electricity, or even a latrine (going to the bathroom consisted of digging a hole in the sand). And even though our hosts pleaded with us to stay awhile, after two days I worried that every scrap of food we ate was one less morsel they would have for themselves. After all, these are people with few means, and we were their guests. And there was no way they would take money from us for food. Pascal’s upcoming jungle adventure sounded like much the same—only humid.

    In my book, Sex, Cheese and French Fries, which takes a humorous look at the challenges of a cross-cultural marriage between an American woman (me) and a French husband (Pascal), there is one chapter titled I married Indiana Jones—and I’m not kidding! Pascal is perfectly suited for this kind of trip. He thrives on exploring undiscovered territory. He is exactly the kind of guy you’d want to be stuck with on a desert island, because he’d figure out how to survive, somehow. And he possesses an internal navigation system that is hardwired into his genes. As for me? To find my way home, my instinct is to line the road behind me with bread-crumbs inevitably eaten by vultures that prey on idiots who don’t know how to read a compass. This trip entailed flying into Lima, Peru, taking another flight to a small town, then another flight to an even smaller military outpost, and from there taking an eight-hour canoe ride to the first of several tribal villages. I thought my husband should go first, and tell me all about it upon his return. In the meantime, I went shopping for a Temple of Doom-style hat-and-whip ensemble for him to wear.

    Pascal’s trip established the groundwork for what we hope will be a replica of the mutually beneficial relationship and friendship we enjoy with our Moroccan farmers—a straightforward business transaction between a manufacturer and supplier that grew into so much more!—only this time, with the Indians who harvest the jagua fruit for us in the Amazon jungle.

    Walking into Body Art

    As I recounted in my book, Mehndi, The Art of Henna Body Painting (published by Random House in 1998), the world of henna tattoos arrived in our little ethnic art universe by way of a proposed photographic exhibition of henna-adorned bodies in our Haitian art gallery located in Hollywood, California. What in the world was my Caribbean art-focused gallery supposed to do with this East Indian art form? I debated with myself. Plus, we’d never had much luck selling photography (this was before art photography went from being a medium that catered to a niche market to one that now appeals to even small babies and their friends). People did and still do come to Galerie Lakaye for serious contemporary art by Haitian artists, but mostly, the staple that brought the masses to our door were inexpensive, brightly colored paintings and traditional Haitian cut-out metal drum sculptures. And, when I say masses I am exaggerating a lot. In fact, we had been scratching our heads trying to decipher exactly where the masses were lately. We wondered if there was some kind of evil ghost in our space, which, unbeknownst to us, was scaring away all potential clients the minute they tried to ring our doorbell. If you were ever in the art business, you would know that being plagued by such questions is standard operating procedure. So, maybe it was desperation that drove us to seriously consider hosting this exhibit, but I like to think it was heightened intuition, having a nose for good business opportunities, and being able to forecast trends! So, off we went to New York to see the proposed exhibit housed in an East Village gallery, where New York artists were raking in the dough tattooing the clientele.

    Much to my surprise, it turned out that henna designs in India were, in some crazy, cosmic way, reminiscent of veves, the Vodou symbols used by Haitian priests and priestesses to invoke the gods (I am a Haitian native). I don’t practice Vodou or any religion, for that matter. But I’m pretty sure those spirits exist! Taking it as a magical sign that we should take a closer look, Pascal and I took the plunge, and before you could say, But how are we going to pull this off in our private home gallery? we were back in Los Angeles, plotting to take over the world, or at the very least, paint it with henna.

    My loving, smart, kind and generous parents (that’s what I call them when they do what I want) loaned us the money to open a space not in our home, and poof! Lakaye Studio opened its doors to hordes of people clamoring for their temporary tattoos. (Let me just explain that when I say poof! what that really means is two hellish and stressful months of hard work.) A few weeks later, we were famous—every media outlet in town covered us for the better part of that year, especially after the celebrities, like Sting and Madonna and Prince, started running around with painted hands and feet; but it wasn’t long before I started dreaming of closing that studio. Why? Having to be somewhere every day at an appointed hour just wasn’t working for me. Also, in ten years of having an art gallery and working with artists, never had there been so much drama and conflicts and issues to deal with. Separately, each artist was great...well, not every single one of them, if truth

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