This site has limited support for your browser. We recommend switching to Edge, Chrome, Safari, or Firefox.

Spilled Ink

There is a global and personal story behind “Ink,” the new creation by Dimitris Papaioannou that premiered in September in Turin, Italy. Just before the European lockdown, the Greek artist was working on his new creation (still untitled): a piece for seven performers which was supposed to debut on the 6th of May at the Onassis Cultural Centre in Athens, an international co-production involving thirteen main institutions, among them the Avignon festival, Lyon Dance Biennial, London Sadler’s Wells, Paris’s Théâtre de la Ville, Napoli Teatro Festival.

Performance

Dimitris Papaioannou's “Ink”

Place

TorinoDanza, Turin, Italy

Words

Valentina Bonelli

Dimitris Papaioannou's “Ink.” Photograph by Julian Mommert

subscribe to the latest in dance


“Uncommonly intelligent, substantial coverage.”

Your weekly source for world-class dance reviews, interviews, articles, and more.

Already a paid subscriber? Login

With every date cancelled and postponed (until who knows when?), two Italian partners, the festivals TorinoDanza in Turin and Aperto in Reggio Emilia, forced to re-scheduled their fall programs, asked Papaioannou if he wished to present a new, even short performance. It has to be said that the link between Italy and the Greek artist is strong: Papaioannou, with his (diminishing) fame of “Greek Bob Wilson” is a regular guest in our country’s avant-garde festivals and theatres. Maybe because of our common, ancient roots, we can well understand and appreciate his mythology.

Anyway, after thinking about the proposal all summer long, Papaioannou accepted, arriving last minute in Italy with a piece titled only three days before the debut.

Dimitris Papaioannou's “Ink.” Photograph by Julian Mommert

The title, “Ink”, tells us a lot about the piece, from an aesthetic point of view first of all. With its dark black backcloth and the water constantly bathing everything, the references to Pina Bausch's “Vollmond” (Full Moon) are so precise that they must be a homage. It’s well known: Papaioannou created the first new commission for Tanztheater Wupperthal, “Since She” (a piece seen also in Italy), in 2018.

This new set hosts a 45-minute hand-to-hand struggle of two opposite men: Dimitris Papaioannou, a mature, dark figure who like a Sisyphus is all the time working with effort, and Šuka Horn, a young performer fair and Apollonian, naked like a statue. The relationship between the two men, is to guess: they could be a father and son, a Pygmalion and his creature, most probably two lovers as seems to confirm the creature they give birth at the end: half baby, half octopus. An aborted birth, with a flood of ink flowing from the guts.

Dimitris Papaioannou's “Ink.” Photograph by Julian Mommert

Since “Ink” is a post-lockdown staging, assembled with materials from the confinement period spent by Papaioannou in Greece, finding elements of his biography in the work is unavoidable, supported by social networks revealing all of our lives. It is interesting to know that during recent months the director-choreographer was very close to Šuka Horn, having arrived from Germany to perform in the new Papaioannou’s work and stranded in Athens by the pandemic. Posted on Papaioannou’s Instagram profile we can see his beautiful sketches and watercolors portraying the young performer in a David Hockney style, wearing a sailor t-shirt like Rainer Fassbinder’s Querelle de Brest.

Artistic clues reveal how Horn has become a male muse for the artist, transformed on stage by references from art, cinema, Greek mythology. Lying on the wet floor, the performer reproduces Andrea Mantegna’s painting The Lamentation of Christ, a Renaissance masterpiece kept in Milan at Pinacoteca di Brera (Brera’s Picture Gallery), showing a man of the people, not more a god, in a then revolutionary perspective. Again, a photo posted on his Instagram, fixing Papaioannou in that iconic pose, seems to suggest that Horn is a kind of his younger and purest alter ego. Holding a glass boule for fishes or a psychedelic ball of disco, the performer also becomes Atlas, the titan with the world on his shoulders, quoting the Hellenistic sculpture Atlante Farnese kept in Naples, at Museo Archeologico Nazionale. (National Archaeological Museum) A typical Papaioannou’s source, confirming how Greek myths are still vital to him and how they continue to inform his classical, plastic aesthetic.

Clearly, and according to Papaioannou, “Ink” is still a sketched performance, a core for a new work still to create, but it was important to show it, and only in Italy, to give a sign, to be present.

Valentina Bonelli


Valentina Bonelli is a dance journalist and critic based in Milan, and a longtime contributor to Vogue Italia and Amadeus. She is a correspondent from Italy for international dance magazines such as Dance Europe and Dance Magazine Japan. As a scholar her main interest lies in the XIX century Russian ballet, in its connections with the Italian ballet school. She has translated and edited Marius Petipa’s Memoires (2010) and Diaries (2018) into Italian, and she is currently writing essays and biographies about La Scala ballerinas dancing at Russian Imperial theatres.

comments

Featured

Never Forget
REVIEWS | Victoria Looseleaf

Never Forget

Never forget!” With the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz and International Holocaust Remembrance Day both having been recognized last month, these words, although unspoken, coursed through Melissa Barak’s first evening-length ballet, “Memoryhouse.”

Continue Reading
A Muted Malpaso
REVIEWS | Karen Hildebrand

A Muted Malpaso

Translated, “malpaso” means misstep, suggesting clumsiness. In the case of Havana based Malpaso Dance Company, the name is a clever misdirection, pointing to a sense of humor often present with this versatile and highly trained troupe.

Continue Reading
Winter Lake Effects 
REVIEWS | Faye Arthurs

Winter Lake Effects 

On the eve of George Balanchine’s birthday, the New York City Ballet opened its Winter Season with a killer all-Balanchine program: “Concerto Barocco,” “Allegro Brillante,” and “Brahms-Schoenberg Quartet.”

Continue Reading
Good Subscription Agency