The door was propped open. A small dog with an exaggerated overbite greeted me with a hesitant sniff last Friday at Tengu Yama Studio on Rock City Road. I stepped into a room filled with hand-painted Japanese-style tattoo sketches, soft chatter, and the steady hum of a tattoo machine. Jay Rios, sleeves rolled and focused, was perched up a narrow stairway in an attic of sorts, working a floral-eyed panther into the thigh of Stella Newbury.
โI wanted to pay homage to Ed Hardy,โ he said, glancing up as Newbury appeared unfazed by the dull pain. โBut also bring in some Tibetan influence after visiting the monastery yesterday.โ The designโhalf panther, half blossomโunfurled in black ink, drawn freehand.

Rios, 28, comes from Santurce, a neighborhood in San Juan, Puerto Rico. He trained and works at Harisumi, a studio rooted in traditional tattoo lineage, and now travels frequently to work in New York, Chicago, and Europe. This was his second guest spot at the Woodstock shop, run by his friends, spouses Rodrigo and Anna Melo. Rodrigo met Hari, the owner of Harisumi, some 30 years ago. After reading Rodrigoโs book “Japanese Style Tattoo Art: Revisiting Traditional Themes,” Rios sent him a message. โIt changed my whole perspective on large-scale tattooing,โ he says. โI knew I had to do it with him.โ Rodrigo is now working on a full back piece for Rios depicting Kokลซzล Bosatsuโalso known as ฤkฤลagarbhaโa Bodhisattva venerated in Japanese, Chinese, and Korean Buddhism.
โI feel more comfortable at my tattoo shop in Puerto Rico than I do at home,โ Rios said. โItโs calm. Itโs intentional.โ
Melosโ shop, a bright and quiet space just off the main drag, opened last Septemberโthough Anna and Rodrigo have worked in Woodstock for five years. Before that, they ran North Star Tattoo on the Lower East Side of Manhattan, then took a van cross-country, winding through Mexico and California before returning to the Hudson Valley with their young daughter.
โRodrigo did my first tattoo when I was 18,โ Anna told me, settling onto a low couch near the flash-covered walls. โYears later, he became my teacher. I learned to make needles, build machinesโeverything, ground up.โ
Anna, who immigrated from the former Soviet Union as a child and grew up in South Brooklyn, paints every flash design that lines the shopโs walls. Her aestheticโJapanese and Americana with a touch of horrorโgives the room its moody elegance. Thereโs Nosferatu, hand-painted. Freddy Krueger in vivid reds. Every image carries the careful touch of an artist trained in fine art and shaped by years of shop work in Montclair, Jersey City and beyond.
โWhen I first started, Iโd go home and cry,โ Anna said, because of the grueling dedication needed to learn how to tattoo well. โNow itโs meditative. I go into a flow, and everything else disappears.โ
Rios echoed the sentiment. โTattooing taught me to care for people,โ he said. โYouโre not working on a canvas. Youโre working on a personโsomeone who maybe saved up for this moment. That matters.โ

His client, Newbury, nodded as the machine paused. โItโs a comfortable pain,โ she said. โThereโs something really grounding about it.โ She had driven up from Westchester after meeting Rios at the Hudson Valley Tattoo Convention in April. There, he tattooed her using one of his original paintings.
For Rios, every piece carries something layeredโPuerto Rican symbols like the coquรญ frog, Hardy-era line-work or simply something someone loves. โNot every tattoo has to have a deep meaning,โ he said. โBut maybe the meaning comes after. Maybe it finds you later.โ
Noah Eckstein is the editor-in-chief of The Overlook. Send correspondence to noah@theoverlooknews.com.


