For decades, Russia’s prison system developed its own complex visual language — one where tattoos weren’t just decoration, but a detailed record of a person’s crimes, rank, beliefs, and life story. Every symbol carried meaning. Every mark told a history.
This collection documents the work of Soviet criminologist Arkady Bronnikov, who spent years photographing and cataloging the tattoos of inmates in Soviet prisons and labor camps during the mid-20th century. Often called the foremost expert on Russian criminal tattoo iconography, Bronnikov helped preserve a hidden culture where ink functioned as identity, status, and personal code.
What follows is a rare look at this visual language — a world where the body itself became a biography.












