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'Tattooing is fine art': Award-winning Kiwi tattooist showcases body of work

Author
Carolyne Meng-Yee,
Publish Date
Sun, 5 Oct 2025, 10:18am

'Tattooing is fine art': Award-winning Kiwi tattooist showcases body of work

Author
Carolyne Meng-Yee,
Publish Date
Sun, 5 Oct 2025, 10:18am

A tattoo can take up to 40 days for award-winning artist Matt Jordan. He鈥檚 responsible for some of the most recognisable tattoos in New Zealand, including Millie Elder-Holmes鈥 famous leg portraits. Carolyne Meng-Yee reports on his upcoming retrospective.

Matt Jordan says he was born with ink in his veins.

The tattooist has his father鈥檚 heart literally inked on his sleeve, and a dinosaur on a BMX around his neck - a shout-out to his teenage son Locky.

And on his leg, a line from the Beatles: 鈥淪omething in the way she woos me鈥 鈥 a nod to his wife Elise. He got it for their wedding day.

Millie Elder-Holmes' tattoo of her late father, the broadcaster Paul Holmes, was designed and executed by Matt Jordan.
Millie Elder-Holmes' tattoo of her late father, the broadcaster Paul Holmes, was designed and executed by Matt Jordan.

Jordan, 39, is a multi-award-winning tattooist who works exclusively in black and grey.

In 2023 and 2024 he won first prize in black and grey at the 鈥淥lympics鈥 of tattooing, the prestigious invitation-only Gods of Ink tattoo convention in Germany.

In New Zealand, some of his most recognisable works belong to Millie Elder-Holmes, a close friend.

A portrait of her father, the late broadcaster Sir Paul Holmes, is tattooed on one leg and a portrait of her late boyfriend Connor Morris, murdered in 2014, is on the other.

鈥淢y clients will be semi-naked鈥

It鈥檚 humming at Ship Shape, the realism tattoo studio in Dairy Flat that Jordan and his co-owners Ben Kaye and Jason Baker transformed from a derelict building seven years ago.

The steady buzz comes from tattoo machines: ten artists at work.

Over Jordan鈥檚 shoulder hangs a photo of his father Fats, smiling. He died from bowel cancer aged 36 when Jordan was just six. 鈥淚t鈥檚 nice to have dad close to me, I owe him everything.鈥 he told the Herald.

Mark "Fats" Jordan, was a tattoo artist from Christchurch. He died when his son Matt was 6 years-old. Matt learned to draw in his studio and is now a sought-after tattoo artist too. Photo / Supplied
Mark "Fats" Jordan, was a tattoo artist from Christchurch. He died when his son Matt was 6 years-old. Matt learned to draw in his studio and is now a sought-after tattoo artist too. Photo / Supplied

Jordan is working on tattoos for his upcoming exhibition A Body Of Work which will open at 131 Queen st on October 13, featuring both larger-than-life photographs, and live models, displaying seven years of his work.

The artist said he鈥檚 taken a $150,000 mortgage on his home to bring the exhibition to life.

Today鈥檚 client, who will be part of the live exhibition, is face down and zoned out. She doesn鈥檛 flinch as Jordan works 鈥 steady hands 鈥 layering more ink onto the design across her back.

鈥淪he鈥檚 probably thinking of different ways to kill me or hurt me back. I often joke I鈥檇 be great at selling voodoo dolls of myself or have an OnlyFans page where I鈥檓 being tattooed.鈥

This back tattoo will be part of Matt Jordan's exhibition. It took around 40 days and celebrates overcoming addiction. Photo / Supplied
This back tattoo will be part of Matt Jordan's exhibition. It took around 40 days and celebrates overcoming addiction. Photo / Supplied

It鈥檚 taken around 40 days to complete this client鈥檚 back and legs. Jordan says the work is a celebration of her personal story overcoming addiction.

鈥淲e鈥檙e not f***ing around, we are creating fine art. My clients will be standing semi-naked [in the exhibition] so you can see their tattoos.

Matt Jordan said his clients will be semi-naked in his exhibition, and standing next to larger-than-life photos so people can see every detail. Photo / Carson Bluck
Matt Jordan said his clients will be semi-naked in his exhibition, and standing next to larger-than-life photos so people can see every detail. Photo / Carson Bluck

鈥淭hey鈥檒l be standing next to larger-than-life photos ... there鈥檚 a big difference between looking at a painting in the Louvre on your phone and going to the Louvre - I want people to go to the Louvre.

鈥淚 want [people to] see every little imperfection and see the wrinkles, the person, the blowouts, I want them to see it all.鈥

Matt Jordan's tattoo of Gericault's Raft of the Medusa for Lee Johnson, in  front of he original painting in the Louvre. Photo / Supplied.
Matt Jordan's tattoo of Gericault's Raft of the Medusa for Lee Johnson, in front of he original painting in the Louvre. Photo / Supplied.

Jordan was born in Sydney to Mark (Fats) and Sue Donnelly 鈥 he was the youngest of their two children.

Fats was a well-known tattoo artist from Christchurch, 鈥渟cruffy, and a bit rough. He was a likeable rogue鈥 Jordan told the Herald. 鈥淢e and my sister meant the world to him. I think he鈥檇 be super proud of what I鈥檝e done.鈥

Matt Jordan tattoo artist with his sister Bonnie. When their parents separated, Matt lived with their mother and Bonnie with their father. Photo / Supplied
Matt Jordan tattoo artist with his sister Bonnie. When their parents separated, Matt lived with their mother and Bonnie with their father. Photo / Supplied

Jordan鈥檚 parents separated after the family moved to Christchurch when he was three. Jordan stayed with his Mum, while his sister Bonnie stayed with their Dad. When he visited his father in the weekends he learnt to draw in his studio.

In the classroom, he says he felt like 鈥渢he weirdo.鈥

鈥淚 was always being pulled out of class, like they were trying to figure out what was wrong with me. Reading recovery, speech therapy for my lisp鈥 I鈥檓 very dyslexic. Maybe on the spectrum. But no one picked up on that back then.

Tattoo artist Matt Jordan with his baby brother Bob. Jordan says he was made to feel like a "weirdo" at school. Photo / Supplied
Tattoo artist Matt Jordan with his baby brother Bob. Jordan says he was made to feel like a "weirdo" at school. Photo / Supplied

鈥淚t was rough. I got bullied a lot because I was a big kid ... it鈥檚 like 鈥榶ou are trouble, you are a nuisance.鈥

He left school at school at 14 to work on a dairy farm. At night he practised drawing and tattooing on himself.

 Tattoo artist Matt Jordan said his mother Sue Donnelly has never doubted his ability and always encouraged his art. Photo / Supplied
Tattoo artist Matt Jordan said his mother Sue Donnelly has never doubted his ability and always encouraged his art. Photo / Supplied

He is thankful his mother never doubted his ability, and encouraged his art.

Sue is covered in ink too - and his own body is a living canvas.

鈥淚 started winning awards鈥

Over time, Jordan found his style: black and grey tattooing that emerged from Los Angeles gangs and prison culture.

鈥淚t developed into this beautiful, super-polished style and then started merging with the work of the Renaissance idols I loved - Caravaggio and Peter Paul Rubens.

Matt Jordan found his style in black and grey tattooing, and turned his attention to fine art and composition. Photo / supplied
Matt Jordan found his style in black and grey tattooing, and turned his attention to fine art and composition. Photo / supplied

Jordan turned his focus to composition, and learned how to paint.

鈥淚 sucked at first but I was stubborn and didn鈥檛 quit. I stuck with it, there were times we couldn鈥檛 make the rent and my wife put up with it, then the scale tipped and I started to win awards, get the recognition - and the appointments came.鈥

For his first portrait, a rendition of Caravaggio鈥檚 The Entombment of Christ, his wife and son posed for him.

鈥淚 started posing and composing people to create these big, multi-figure compositions. With the recreation of the Rubens Wolf Hunt, we photographed stunt riders on horses and dogs attacking people.

鈥淚t felt like I was creating something new - even though really I was standing on the shoulders of giants, you know the tattooists and the painters - but they merged into this special thing for me.鈥

 Matt Jordan photographed attacking dogs (pictured) and stunt riders in order to create his dramatic multi-figure compositions. Photo / Supplied
Matt Jordan photographed attacking dogs (pictured) and stunt riders in order to create his dramatic multi-figure compositions. Photo / Supplied

Jordan approached Mitch Shea - a sculptor and the Director of Sculpture at the Florence Academy of Art - and asked him to critique his work.

鈥淗e gave me a scathing review, but I applied that to my art. If I wanted to come close to the masters and their work, who better to go to than somebody who has lived and breathed it, you know. Mitch and I are friends now.鈥

Home is up north with Elise 鈥 Jordan鈥檚 teenage sweetheart and wife of twenty years 鈥 their 15-year-old son Locky, four dogs, and a cat.

鈥淲e were teens when we met. Matt didn鈥檛 look sweet 鈥 big, bald, tattooed 鈥 but he was a marshmallow. I鈥檓 immensely proud of him. When we were young, we were delinquents. We never thought we鈥檇 end up here,鈥 Elise said.

 Tattoo artist Matt Jordan and his wife Elise. They met as teenagers at a house party. Photo / Supplied.
Tattoo artist Matt Jordan and his wife Elise. They met as teenagers at a house party. Photo / Supplied.

The pair met at a house party after their high school exams. She is the one who keeps him grounded, he says.

Elise admires her husband鈥檚 creativity and his relentless pursuit of perfection.

鈥淗e is doing this for his art. Financially it鈥檚 a risky move, these pieces take time and cost lots of money, we still have bills to pay.鈥

Jordan says he doesn鈥檛 mind if he doesn鈥檛 sell anything, he just wants people to come and see it. 鈥淥nce it鈥檚 gone, it鈥檚 gone鈥

A Body Of Work, Level 7, 131 Queen St October 13th- November 29th, admission free.

is an Auckland-based investigative journalist who won Best Documentary at the Voyager Media Awards. Recently she was runner-up for Best Editorial Campaign and part of a team that won Best Coverage of a Major 九一星空无限 Event: Philip Polkinghorne Murder Trial. She worked for the Herald on Sunday then rejoined the Herald in 2016 after working as an award-winning current affairs producer at TVNZ鈥檚 60 Minutes,20/20andSunday.

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