Genderqueer tattoo artist Vegas Vecchio brings unicorn fantasy to Kraken Pride Night
Vegas Vecchio wearing a Kraken Pride jersey Source: Vegas Vecchio

Genderqueer tattoo artist Vegas Vecchio brings unicorn fantasy to Kraken Pride Night

CJ Emerson READ TIME: 1 MIN.

Vegas Vecchio had a big task on their shoulders. The Seattle Kraken wanted them to make art for the team’s upcoming Pride Night. But it wouldn’t happen in June: The team’s on hiatus by the time June rolls around. 

So, this year’s Pride game, versus the Minnesota Wild, had to take place on January 8 — during the month of holiday hangovers and The Big Dark. Creating enthusiasm to celebrate queerness on a cold, rainy Thursday evening was inevitably going to be a challenge. 

Vecchio, however, is used to staying flexible. They’re a genderqueer artist and UW alum who started out painting live musicians in Georgetown, where they developed their unique style: kaleidoscopes of intense color against velvety black backgrounds, figures who are both absorbed by their surroundings, yet in contrast, also explode off the canvas.

Painting collage -

Despite finding plenty of joy in the musical world, Vecchio knew it was just a temporary stop toward a dream they had to pursue: becoming a professional tattoo artist. They found a mentor, Abra, who taught them the tools of the trade, despite their creative differences. Abra’s a traditionalist who prefers the hand-poke technique, but Vecchio didn't quite have the patience for it. They needed to blaze a path that worked uniquely for them. 

“The tattoo industry can be really hard to break into, especially if you don’t know a guy who’ll teach you, and especially if you’re not a man, if you’re not cis,” said Vecchio. “So, it was really like a hustle to take a nontraditional approach.” 

The hustle has been constant. Vecchio worked hard enough to open their own private tattoo studio, Ruled by Venus Ink, and they’ve inked hundreds of designs since. Still, even with all the experience, the Kraken’s request for them to reimagine the logo was daunting. The first step, coming up with the design, was the easiest part.

“The unicorn was there from the beginning. I was trying to entertain doing something else. I played around with a hyena for a little bit, but nothing else stuck as well as the OG,” said Vecchio about their process. “It just felt like… How could no one have thought of this yet?” 

What came next — actualizing the design into a real artistic product — was where things got difficult. In an Instagram tell-all following the logo’s reveal, Vecchio admitted that they “went underground for two months” while working on the project. They had multiple creative breakdowns, stemming from the pressure of having to be an ambassador for Pride. Could the art they make, and even Vecchio, actually represent a holiday that means so many different things for so many people? 

“Coal under pressure makes diamonds,” said Vecchio in retrospect. “I don’t think the art would be as moving as it has been if I didn’t go through that.” 

Whether the struggle of an artist to make their work is “worth it” is subjective. What is objective, however, is the success Vecchio had in capturing hearts and minds. 

Once Pride Night began, you couldn’t be anywhere in Climate Pledge Arena without a unicorn looking back at you. The reimagined logo’s  merch — including shirts, hats, and pucks — almost immediately sold out. The charity auction, with jerseys signed by Kraken stars like Berkly Catton and Matty Beniers, was the highest grossing to date: $100,000 in barely a day’s time. 

Vegas Vecchio on the big screen at Climate Pledge Arena 1/8 -

Every cent made off the auction was split between the One Roof Foundation (the Kraken’s philanthropic arm, which provides financial assistance to low-income kids and families) and Seattle Pride, the organizing body behind Seattle PrideFest and the annual Pride Parade. Given the budget deficit of $350,000 that Seattle Pride had to endure last year due to corporate retreats from LGBTQ+ causes, Vecchio’s work now serves as the antidote. The $50,000 raised for Seattle Pride should, hopefully, help to sustain our community’s traditions both this year and beyond.

“Seeing, tonight, the culmination of it all, it really makes it worthwhile,” Vecchio said. “I wouldn’t have it any other way.”

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by CJ Emerson , Associate Editor

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