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Tag: Sol Tribe

  • Cold Moon Piercing and Tattoo hopes to carry on the legacies of Sol Tribe and Alicia Cardenas

    Cold Moon Piercing and Tattoo hopes to carry on the legacies of Sol Tribe and Alicia Cardenas

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    Casey Hosch stands in the future home of her Cold Moon Piercing and Tattoo on South Broadway. July 23, 2024.

    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Casey Hosch stands outside Sol Tribe Tattoo and Piercing, the shop where she learned to pierce and run a business. 

    Sol Tribe was a space of ritual, activism, joy and community, she recalls. It was also the place where a white supremacist murdered Hosch’s mentor Alicia Cardenas and coworker Alyssa Gunn-Maldonado in December 2021. 

    Now, in mid-July of this year, the storefront is boarded up after closing abruptly on July 1.

    Hosch is opening a new piercing and tattoo studio a few doors down on South Broadway. 

    She’s calling her new studio Cold Moon Piercing and Tattoo, a melancholy nod to the studio where Hosch came of age.  

    Hosch thought she’d be at Sol Tribe for the long haul. 

    Around 2020, Cardenas began shifting her career from body art to muralism. She talked about passing the shop on to Hosch. Nothing was in writing, but that was their understanding. 

    A year later, Cardenas and Gunn-Maldonado were gone.  

    In the weeks following their deaths, the community rallied around Sol Tribe. People mourned the losses

    A memorial to Alicia Cardenas in Hope Tank’s new location at 1434 E. 22nd Ave. in City Park West. May 26, 2023.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    The shop stayed closed for a while, but the pause was brief. Denver’s high cost of living made taking a break impossible. 

    “We didn’t get a whole lot of free time off,” Hosch said. “We took some time to grieve, but realistically, Sol Tribe itself couldn’t maintain without us working. We couldn’t pay our bills without us working. It’s very interesting that you just have to suck it up and get back to work. There’s not really a lot you can do — especially living in Denver these days. It’s so expensive. So we got back to work.” 

    At first, Hosch struggled to shower, dress, and leave the house. Eventually, she started coming back to work. 

    She and the artists tried to keep Sol Tribe alive after the murders. They changed a few things. The shop stopped taking walk-in appointments. They cautioned customers to keep things light to preserve their mental health. Sometimes conversations were awkward. 

    But mostly, those who worked there were glad to carry on with Cardenas’ legacy. 

    Alicia Cardenas, owner of Sol Tribe Tattoo and Body Piercing, stands in her Broadway shop as her kid, Xochitl, plays on a silk behind her. April 22, 2020.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Over the past two-and-a-half years, Hosch managed the shop as she mourned and made plans to buy Sol Tribe from Cardenas’ co-owner. But she signed no contracts and did no deals. 

    Then, earlier this year, the remaining owner told staff he would be closing Sol Tribe down. 

    Initially, staff heard the shop would close at the end of July, giving them more than a month to decide what to do next. 

    “We were all under the impression that Sol Tribe would be open through July,” Hosch told Denverite. “And instead, we all got a message via Slack, an hour before we show up to work on Monday, July 1, saying: ‘Shop’s closed. We’re done.’”

    All the artists, most living paycheck-to-paycheck, found themselves out of work. 

    Using the business skills she learned from Cardenas, Hosch secured a loan and signed a lease at 120 S. Broadway. She started building out the space that will soon open as Cold Moon. 

    ‘I want to stay on Broadway,’ Hosch said. ‘I love-hate Broadway, for sure. But I want to stay here.’

    The strip has changed a lot over the years. Many small businesses she loved are gone. But some are still around. 

    Hosch plans to keep Cardenas’ values alive at Cold Moon: activism, ritual and community. 

    The future home of Cold Moon Piercing and Tattoo on South Broadway. July 23, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Cardenas always told Hosch piercing is about more than poking a hole in your face.

    “It’s altering your body, and it should be taken a lot more seriously,” she said. “It should be a special thing. For a lot of cultures, it’s a rite of passage. There’s so much more to it than just your $20 piercing at the strip mall.”

    Hosch agreed to bring many of Sol Tribe’s artists with her, to keep their community entact. Shops including Rising Tide Tattoo, Wolf and Goat Piercing, Bound by Design and the Crypt Denver took in others. 

    “I’m trying to open as soon as possible,” Hosch said. “I’m really hoping to have some major things accomplished by the end of this month. It’s chugging along. I’m excited. I need to pierce again. I miss it. I love it. And I just want a place to pierce and try to be a good person.”

    Casey Hosch works in the future home of her Cold Moon Piercing and Tattoo on South Broadway. July 23, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

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    Kyle Harris

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  • Sol Tribe Tattoo & Piercing closes on Broadway after 15 years

    Sol Tribe Tattoo & Piercing closes on Broadway after 15 years

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    A white supremacist murdered founder Alicia Cardenas in 2021. The shop was a leader in the national body art scene.

    A vigil for the victims of a white supremacist murder spree outside of Sol Tribe Tattoo on South Broadway in Denver. Jan. 8, 2022.

    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    South Broadway’s Sol Tribe Tattoo & Piercing, at 56 Broadway, closed permanently on Monday.

    “It’s with a very heavy heart that the staff of Sol Tribe say final goodbyes to the studio today suddenly,” the shop posted to social media. “We thought we had another month of sorting out details before the final closing of Sol Tribe, but that wasn’t the case. We are completely devastated.”

    Staff at Sol Tribe were not immediately available for comment. 

    The shop was founded by artist Alicia Cardenas, who was killed there by a white supremacist in a December 2021 mass shooting.

    Cardenas is credited with pushing forward national standards for healthier body-art creation. She challenged cultural appropriation and patriarchy within body-art culture, and often collaborating with activist projects around town.

    The shop continued that legacy after her death. 

    Alicia Cardenas, owner of Sol Tribe Tattoo and Body Piercing, stands in her Broadway shop as her kid, Xochitl, plays on a silk behind her. April 22, 2020. (Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite)

    Supporters of the shop commented on the post in droves. 

    Some described Sol Tribe as a “sacred space.”

    Others said they were heartbroken after reading the news.

    “Yall are an inspiration, strong, kind and will never be forgotten as leaders in the industry in Denver!!!” the Wolf Den Tattoo Shop wrote on social media. “Cheers to new endeavors and hope yall find peace and creativity in your hearts!” 

    Many commenters reminisced about receiving their first tattoos or piercings at the shop, and they shouted out the various artists they worked with over the years.

    “We are so sorry for the sudden closure,” the shop posted on social media. “We thought we had another month of work before this was official.”

    Many of the artists at Sol Tribe will be moving on to other opportunities. 

    The shop encouraged customers to follow their favorite artists elsewhere. 

    Some will be founding and working at a soon-to-open shop, Cold Moon Piercing and Tattoo

    Others will go to other shops including Wolf and Goat, Rising Tide Tattoo, Bound by Design, The Crypt Denver and Landmark Tattoo.

    Sol Tribe posted the full list on social media

    “We want to thank you, our amazing clients and friends, for an incredible 15 years of piercing and tattooing you,” Sol Tribe wrote. “Y’all have supported us through figurative hell, and during our hardest moments and we will never forget that. We are stunned by this news and we are heartbroken.”

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