![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiwX0fE6ZsFRhLxkTydXjHU7Nd7nZoJP7zsulp-ci7FMRCVOLwatqoy2p3kSHsyJAeaNIjEvIDwSI-uyXjn237WOavNnvuMKSAVMBqtur1mdg68PmBAI-Gx8FKnviMQZg9FgZnRRpj8tPY/s400/woodstock+dad.jpg)
What seems at first like an odd juxtaposition of figures makes more sense when it is explained.
The piece is a memorial based on a photograph of his father,
After searching for a while, I emailed Chris and asked if he could send me the photo. He generously obliged:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjT6VksrEfMqStyONDl7uOgfjy4kqwCi_jo83I-sKWp0fxsUJp5dRLuHKbhyphenhyphenixHUGVBfMeEwqaBxYg0FWBOWnc8dxe7Aa59wr_PQb5UX1P7wAR9bvdup2mKD5nJAkK1GjhN_IsPCQMq778/s400/6+copy.jpg)
Seeing the source material on which this piece is based makes it cooler. The photograph appears in the book, and was taken
And the back of the arm features a quote from Chris's dad, a statement he would often make, which seems genuinely appropriate from someone so deeply immersed in the culture of the 1960s:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh19ki49jY6TXcPd5xi3EdhKslvM54RW7O8exqDyCDFfKhSn6pZx55DA-RaxVJ5bVU6v0asWf8svWI0Zf_e10kXXrhE44FG5pPIqGbIqOBv4D4lgQfooIHLoFN_Ctymm8-7nJk9PZZAfG0/s400/whos+better.jpg)
Chris had his tattoos inked by Nick Caruso at Fly-Rite Studio in Brooklyn. Work from Fly-Rite has appeared previously on Tattoosday here.
Thanks to Chris for sharing his work here on Tattoosday!
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