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Artoria
Gibbons
Artoria
was a tattoo attraction
that worked for
35 years in circus
and carnival sideshows,
including the Ringling,
Barnum & Bailey
Brothers Circus
(from 1921 to 1923),
the Hagenbeck-Wallace
in 1924 and others.
Artoria was the
stage name for
Mrs. C. W. (Red)
Gibbons.

The picture above is a 1930s Percy
Waters card showing Artoria's front
and back view.
Artoria was born on a farm in upper
Wisconsin. Her parents were poor
and by the age of 14 she decided
to leave home. When she was interviewed
by Arthur Lewis, writer and author
of the book, "Carnival, she said, "I
never been no place in my life." While
hanging around a local carnival
sideshow she met Red Gibbons. "Him
and me got to talking, tole me
the show didn't have no tattooed
lady and would I like to be one." Said
he was the tattoo artist and if
I let him tattoo me I could join
the show and see the world. Well
that's what I done. We was married
soon after that and we both had
a good life. There ain't hardly
no place in the country I ain't
been to but when he died (late
1940's) I went into retirement
out on the west coast."
In the 1950s Artoria came out of
retirement and worked with the
Dell-Travers ten-in-one show: " Last
year I saw Mr. Potter's advertisement
in "Billboard." I applied for the
job and here I am folks, to show
you the most amazing tattoo in
the world, covering more than eighty
percent of my entire body."
Artoria's tattoos were amazing:
magnificent reproductions of paintings
by Raphael and Michelangelo and
a few patriotic designs but for
those few exceptions the main inspiration
is Italian. "My husband done
everyone of them," she said proudly. "They're
all masterpieces. He was crazy
'bout eyetalian (sic) painters."
Tattoo Archive © 2003
Artoria Gibbons Update 2006!

Little has been written on the lives and careers of many tattooists and tattooed attractions of the past. Some of them have gone so far as to write their autobiographies, but these are few and far-between. Others have been interviewed for magazines and newspaper articles giving us some insight into their lives. Unfortunately, and more often than not, the writers of these articles have their own agendas. They embellish their stories, perhaps to sell more books, which results in a distorted history. Sometimes all we can do is to take tidbits of available information and try shaping it into a picture of what these tattooed folks were really like. This distortion is not unique to tattoo history. It shows up in much historical writing making it all the more important for historians to get the record straight.
I was recently contacted by Charlene Anne Gibbons, who was doing family research on her tattooed parents, Artoria and Charles “Red” Gibbons. She had stumbled onto the Tattoo Archive’s website and took exception to the biographical information on her mother in our history section. She thought that the portrayal of her mother’s speech, as quoted from the book Carnival by Arthur Lewis, was degrading. Contrary to what was written, she said that Artoria never left home at the age of 14 and that her parents had been married for 4 or 5 years before Artoria began getting tattooed by her father.
Charles “Red” Gibbons was one of the best tattooists of his generation. There is no better example of his skill than his beautiful wife Anne (who used the stage name Artoria). Carrying on in the grand tradition that goes back to the 1800’s, a tattooist would tattoo his wife thus making her his calling card for his tattooing ability. The tattoo art on Artoria’s body was so beautiful and she was such a looker that I’m certain she often stole the spotlight from her tattooist husband.

Charlene also told me that due to getting beat up during a brutal robbery on his way home from work in 1941 and a construction accident in 1946, Red became totally blind. Red Gibbons died on June 18, 1964.
Artoria was in retirement when she saw a Billboard advertisement seeking a tattooed lady for the Dell-Travers Ten–In-One Show. She got the job and spent several more years on the road, later working for Ward Hall. Artoria died on March 18, 1985.
Her daughter Charlene is now in the process of writing a book about her famous parents and hopes to set the record straight. Charlene said,”I am writing the book myself. It is about my extraordinary parents, their lives, and the people they came into contact with along the way. It is a tribute to the ‘finest in tattooing’ and show-business life. I understand from what I have read, not much is known about my parents, what seems to be known has not been written by ‘personal knowledge’ at all. It has all been speculation, gossip, and innuendo, and does not do justice to either of my parents.”
The tattoo world will sure be looking forward to that book!
Tattoo Archive © 2006
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Artoria Gibbons
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