The man who sold his back to an art dealer

  • Published
Tim, 2006-8, by Wim DelvoyeImage source, Wim Delvoye

Tim Steiner has an elaborate tattoo on his back that was designed by a famous artist and sold to a German art collector. When Steiner dies his skin will be framed - until then he spends his life sitting in galleries with his shirt off.

"The work of art is on my back, I'm just the guy carrying it around," says the 40-year-old former tattoo parlour manager from Zurich.

A decade ago, his then girlfriend met a Belgian artist called Wim Delvoye, who'd become well known for his controversial work tattooing pigs.

Delvoye told her he was looking for someone to agree to be a human canvas for a new work and asked if she knew anyone who might be interested.

"She called me on the phone, and I said spontaneously, 'I'd like to do that,'" Steiner says.

Two years later, after 40 hours of tattooing, the image spread across his entire back - a Madonna crowned by a Mexican-style skull, with yellow rays emanating from her halo.

There are swooping swallows, red and blue roses, and at the base of Steiner's back two Chinese-style koi fish, ridden by children, can be seen swimming past lotus flowers. The artist has signed the work on the right hand side.

Image source, Yang Zhen
Image caption,

Collectors can buy the pig skins tattooed by Wim Delvoye once the pigs have died of old age

"It's the ultimate art form in my eyes," Steiner says.

"Tattooers are incredible artists who've never really been accepted in the contemporary art world. Painting on canvas is one thing, painting on skin with needles is a whole other story."

The work, entitled TIM, sold for 150,000 euros (£130,000) to German art collector Rik Reinking in 2008, with Steiner receiving one third of the sum.

"My skin belongs to Rik Reinking now," he says. "My back is the canvas, I am the temporary frame."

As part of the deal, when Steiner dies his back is to be skinned, and the skin framed permanently, taking up a place in Reinking's personal art collection.

"Gruesome is relative," Steiner says to those who find the idea macabre.

"It's an old concept - in Japanese tattoo history it's been done many, many times. If it's framed nicely and looks good, I think it's not such a bad idea."

Image source, Wim Delvoye
Image caption,

Delvoye worked for 40 hours to complete the piece

But this aspect of the work often sparks intense debate.

"It becomes a huge discussion matter every time, and those confrontations with people have been very exciting and interesting," Steiner says.

"People are either very into the idea, or say it's going too far - they're outraged or say it's against human rights. They come with ideas of slavery or prostitution."

Find out more

  • Tim Steiner spoke to the BBC World Service programme Outlook in 2008

As part of his contract, Steiner must exhibit the tattoo by sitting topless in a gallery at least three times a year.

His first exhibition took place in Zurich in June 2006 - when the tattoo was still a work-in-progress. When the 10th anniversary fell last year, he was in the middle of his longest-ever exhibition, a whole year at the Museum of Old and New Art (Mona) in Hobart, Tasmania, working five hours a day, six days a week.

That came to an end on Tuesday.

Image source, MONA

"Sit on your desk, with your legs dangling off, straight backed and holding on to your knees for 15 minutes - it's tough," he says.

"I did this for 1,500 hours. It was by far the most outrageously intense experience of my life.

"All that changed throughout the days was my state of mind - sometimes heaven, sometimes hell, always totally alert."

The only thing separating Steiner from visitors to the gallery is a line on the floor - a line that that in the past some have crossed.

"I've been touched, blown on, screamed at, pushed and spat on, it's often been quite a circus," he says. "But I wasn't touched a single time on this trip, it's a miracle."

Image source, Wim Delvoye
Image caption,

Steiner takes in the view during his first stint at Mona in 2012

When people try to speak to him he doesn't move or reply. He just sits still. "Many people think I'm a sculpture, and have quite a shock once they find out I'm actually alive," he says.

But he rejects the idea that this is performance art. "If the name Wim Delvoye was not attached to this tattoo, it would have no artistic relevance," he insists.

It is part of Delvoye's intention, though, to show the difference between a picture on the wall and a "living canvas" that changes over time.

"I can get fat, scarred, burned, anything," Steiner says. "It's the process of living. I've had two lower back operations."

One of the joys of working at Mona has been having the gallery to himself before opening time.

"To be in there by myself, with my headphones in, roaming around and doing my stretches surrounded by stunning art in this mystical building was surreal," he says.

And he will be back there in November, for a six-month stint, after appearances in Denmark and Switzerland.

"This whole experience has convinced me that this is what I am here to do. Sit on boxes," he says.

"And one day TIM will just hang there. Beautiful."

Places Tim has been exhibited

Image source, Wim Delvoye
Image caption,

Tim at the Louvre in 2012

2006: de Pury & Luxembourg gallery, Zurich

2008: Art Farm, Beijing; SH Contemporary Art Fair, Shanghai

2008-9: ZKM, Karlsruhe

2009: Rathaus and Leuphana University, Luneburg

2010-11: Hochschule der Kunste, Berne

2011: Kunsthalle, Osnabruck; Robilant & Voena, London

2011-12: Mona, Hobart

2012: Zone Contemporaine, Berne; Louvre, Paris

2013: Gewerbemuseum, Winterthur; Sammlung Reinking, Hamburg

2014: Weserburg Museum, Bremen; Haus fur Kunst Uri, Altdorf

2015: Strada Fossaccio, Viterbo; Gewerbemuseum, Hamburg; Civita di Bagnoregio, Rome

2016: Mona, Hobart

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