A tart card is a card which advertises the services of a prostitute. The cards are found in many countries, usually in capital cities or red-light districts. Originating in the 1960s, the cards are placed in locations such as newsagents' windows or telephone boxes. Alternatively they are handed out or dropped in the street. Legal action is sometimes taken against their use. Illustrated tart cards from the 1980s and 1990s have come to be regarded as examples of sub-cultural accidental art.

Tart cards in a British phone box advertising the services of call girls in London, 2005

History

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In England and Wales the Sexual Offences Act 1956 made soliciting for street prostitution illegal. As a result, indoor sex work became more common and sex workers began to advertise their services and telephone numbers on small, cheaply produced cards in the windows of newsagents.[1] Known as tart cards, they became established in the 1960s in places such as Soho, London, where they were typically handwritten postcards which were displayed outside prostitutes' flats or in the windows of newsagents or shops. As direct references to prostitution would generally be unacceptable, the cards were carefully worded and often contained euphemistic references to sex, with terms such as large chest for sale.[2]

The abolition of the 1953 Post Office Act in 1984 inadvertently legalised the placement of advertisements in telephone boxes, and they became the main location for tart cards, particularly in London.[1] By the late 1980s the cards had become black-and-white photocopied cards containing printed text and telephone numbers.[3] The cards from the 1980s and 1990s often included black-and-white drawings printed on neon-coloured card along with tongue-in-cheek phrases.[4] In larger cities, the cards were placed in phone boxes.[5] The style of illustration changed in the early twenty-first century, when tart cards began to appear with full-colour nude photographs, mobile telephone numbers and websites.[6]

The cards from the 1980s and 1990s have become a memorable part of London counter-culture from that era.[4] Over time they have become regarded as items of "accidental art" and developed a cult following. They have influenced the work of mainstream artists, inspiring collections, research,[7] exhibitions[8][9] and books such as the 2003 publication Tart Cards: London’s Illicit Advertising Art.[4] Subsequently, they have been recognised as a sociological record of trends related to sex work, advertising, design and print.[10] The Wellcome Collection in London contains thousands of examples, just over half of which advertise BDSM services.[1]

Tart cards by country

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Tart cards in a telephone booth in Brazil, 2006
 
Tart cards in Tokyo, 2005
 
Phone box with tart cards, London, 2017.
  • Argentina: They are found in Buenos Aires.[11]
  • Brazil: They are found in São Paulo.[12]
  • China: They are commonly put under the doors of hotels during the day after the cleaning staff have finished in the rooms.[citation needed]
  • Dubai: Cards advertising "massage" services, often printed with images of women, are delivered to people's homes, placed onto car windows, and distributed by hand in the street. This practice is illegal.[13]
  • Japan: In Japan they were known as "pink flyers" (ピンクチラシ).[14]
  • Macau: They are dropped in the city's sidewalks and underpasses.[15]
  • United Kingdom: in London tart cards are placed in phone boxes[5] by professional "carders", who tour the phone boxes, replacing cards which have been removed by the telephone companies' cleaners. Carders often remove cards placed by rival carders. Placing tart cards in phone boxes was made illegal by the passing of the Criminal Justice and Police Act 2001 which made carding punishable by up to six months imprisonment or a fine of up to £5000.[4] By 2002 most convicted carders were receiving fines of £200–£1000, although persistent offenders were receiving jail terms of 28 days. An estimated 13 million tart cards per year were being distributed across Britain at that time; the telephone company British Telecom was removing 150,000 tart cards per week from central London telephone boxes and it had call-barred 500 of the telephone numbers used on tart cards.[16] However, despite police operations against carders the practice of carding still continues.[17]
  • United States: In hispanophone parts of New York City they are known as "Chica Chica" (Girl Girl) cards and men hand them out as flyers at night on the streets.[18] In Las Vegas they are known as "sex cards" and left on sidewalks and hotel stairways[19] or handed out as flyers.[20]

References

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  1. ^ a b c Lister, Kate (17 October 2018). "Dial 'S' for Sex: A History of a Phone-Booth Subculture in the United Kingdom". Brewminate.
  2. ^ Thomas, Donald (2005). Villains' Paradise: Britain's Underworld from the Spivs to the Krays. John Murray. p. 528. ISBN 978-0719557347. Retrieved 9 August 2015.
  3. ^ "17 Boxes of Smut From The Euston Road". Londonist. 27 March 2008. Retrieved 18 July 2014.
  4. ^ a b c d Cherrybomb (5 July 2017). "London Calling: a Look at Vintage 'Tart Cards' Used by English Prostitutes". Dangerous Minds.
  5. ^ a b "Crackdown on telephone box 'tartcards'". PA News. 16 May 1999.
  6. ^ Russell Dornan (21 March 2014). "Putting the art into "tart"". The Wellcome Collection Blog. Archived from the original on 25 July 2014.
  7. ^ "The Typographic Hub: Tart Cards". Birmingham Institute of Art & Design. Archived from the original on 3 March 2011. Retrieved 18 July 2014.
  8. ^ "Tart Cards Exhibition". Plymouth College of Art. 9–27 January 2012. Archived from the original on 27 July 2014. Retrieved 18 July 2014.
  9. ^ "Sex Issue: Type Tart Cards". Wallpaper magazine. 11 June 2009. Archived from the original on 14 June 2009. Retrieved 18 July 2014.
  10. ^ Bosset, Stephanie (28 February 2020). "London's 'tart cards' reveal history of sex work, design and printing". Euronews.
  11. ^ "Goodbye to the public telephone: only half are left and rarely used". Clarín (in Spanish). 7 February 2009.
  12. ^ Kanno, Maurício (1 February 2010). "Prostitutes and their adverts are coming to Twitter" (in Portuguese). Folha Online.
  13. ^ Mariam M. Al Serkal (14 May 2014). "Massage cards menace continues in Dubai". Gulf News. Archived from the original on 15 May 2014. Retrieved 7 December 2014.
  14. ^ Borggreen, Gunhild (2011). "Cute and Cool in Contemporary Japanese Visual Arts". Copenhagen Journal of Asian Studies. 29 (1): 50.
  15. ^ Katie Hunt (18 June 2013). "The dark side of Asia's gambling Mecca". CNN. Retrieved 15 August 2014.
  16. ^ Diane Taylor (8 July 2002). "Call box cards used to evict prostitutes". The Guardian.
  17. ^ Archer, Caroline; Clayton, Rob (2003). Tart Cards: London's Illicit Advertising Art. Mark Batty. ISBN 9780972424042.
  18. ^ Kenneth Lovett (27 March 2011). "'Chica Chica' cards pimp hookers and prostitution, says state senator who wants to make them illegal". NY Daily News. Retrieved 23 August 2014.
  19. ^ Russel, Sabin (29 June 2003). "'Just Say No' – to sex – hits Las Vegas". San Francisco Chronicle. p. 46.
  20. ^ Dan Hernandez (4 September 2014). "The life of the Vegas 'porn slapper': 'I don't care if they punch or hit me'". The Guardian.

Bibliography

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  • Archer, Caroline; Clayton, Rob (2003). Tart Cards: London's Illicit Advertising Art. West New York, NJ: Mark Batty. ISBN 978-0972424042.
  • Archer, Caroline (2003). "Tart cards". Baseline. No. 40.
  • Devlin, Tony, ed. (1994). The X-Directory: kink cards 1984/1994. London: Pi34. ISBN 978-1898760009.
  • Jewell, Patrick (1993). Vice Art: An Anthology of London's Prostitute Cards. Harrogate: Broadwater House. ISBN 978-0952100942.
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