Delhi-based 28-year-old Karan has become the first Indian to
get his eyeballs tattooed.
Karan, a full-time professional tattoo artist and piercer,
claims that it does not involve risks and is just a way to look and feel
different, first reported by DNA.
Eyeball tattoos are a relatively new extreme body
modification where needles inject ink into the whites of a person's eyes to
permanently dye it a different colour.
According to the report, Karan has lost count of the number
of tattoos he has on his own body.
"At the moment, I have uncountable tattoos and 22
piercings on me," Karan told , adding his full body suit of tattoos is
a work in progress. "Eventually, I will just have one tattoo: head to
finger and toe tips."
On being asked on why he wanted to get this done, he told
DNA: “I always wanted to get something like this done and thus made sure that I
get it done from the person who invented eyeball tattooing a decade back —
Howard Smith. Because as a tattoo artist, my eyes are very important to me.”
According to Karan, he was 13 when he got his first tattoo.
At 16, he started tattooing as a hobby and soon, opened up his own tattoo
studio in Delhi.
He told that six months after beginning his full body
suit, the tattoo artist began to wonder what he would look like if he had his
eyeballs tattooed. He said he spent months debating whether to opt for the
permanent procedure and discussed it with his family and friends.
The procedure, which cost lakhs, was done by an Australian
tattoo artist, who Karan claims invented eyeball tattooing, at a tattoo studio
in New York, US.
But the medical fraternity isn’t impressed with this act.
“In all my career, I have never heard of anything like this. I did not even
know that something like this exists and that people are crazy enough to get it
done. I cannot really comment on the risks involved,” Dr Atul Kumar, head of
ophthalmology department, AIIMS, told DNA.
Meanwhile, Melbourne-based tattoo artist Luna Cobra, who
pioneered eyeball tattooing, has supported calls from a leading medical body to
ban the eye-watering procedure in Australia and New Zealand after rampant
malpractice.
The Melbourne-based practitioner, who has tattooed the eyes
of hundreds of clients worldwide, told The New Daily he backed the calls by the
Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Ophthalmologists.
The high-risk procedure involves permanently changing the
colour of the white part of the eye or sclera using coloured dye that can lead
to infection, intense pain and permanent vision loss.