Jim Ward (body piercing): Difference between revisions
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==External links== | ==External links== | ||
*[ | *[https://wiki.bme.com/index.php?title=Jim_Ward Jim Ward] at the BME Encyclopedia | ||
*[http://www.bmezine.com/news/jimward-all.html Running the Gauntlet] Jim Ward's column at BME | *[http://www.bmezine.com/news/jimward-all.html Running the Gauntlet] Jim Ward's column at BME | ||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Ward, Jim}} | {{DEFAULTSORT:Ward, Jim}} |
Revision as of 00:37, 21 October 2021
Jim Ward is an American body piercer.
Ward was born in 1941 in Western Oklahoma and moved to Colorado when he was eleven.
In 1967, New York jewelry maker he joined the New York Motorbike Club, a gay S&M group, and experimented with nipple piercing. Ward then moved to Colorado, where he and other members of the gay Rocky Mountaineer Motorcycle Club experimented more broadly, with genital piercing in particular. In 1973, Ward moved to West Hollywood (a gay village of Los Angeles) where he met Doug Malloy and Fakir Musafar. Together these men developed the basic techniques and equipment of modern body piercing. Malloy introduced the use of the autoclave and hypodermic needle; Ward developed the fixed bead ring and internally threaded barbells. With funding from Malloy (derived from his work with the Muzak corporation), Ward began using his home as a private piercing studio in 1975. Dubbing his studio The Gauntlet, he drew an initial clientèle by running classified ads in local gay and fetish publications. After three years of continued refinement with techniques and equipment, Ward opened the Gauntlet as a commercial storefront operation in West Hollywood on November 17th, 1978. The establishment of this business - considered the first of its type in the United States - was the beginning of the body piercing industry.
In 1977, Ward started the piercing magazine Piercing Fans International Quarterly (PFIQ).
In a 2004 documentary entitled The Social History of Piercing, MTV called him "the granddaddy of the modern body piercing movement."
External links
- Jim Ward at the BME Encyclopedia
- Running the Gauntlet Jim Ward's column at BME
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