9.02.2012

One of the artworks made by  Gino di Maggio and Daniel Spoerri

There can be found many similarities and differences between Dutch and Italian eating habits. Lately I’ve become interested in the latter one.

As I’ve mentioned before Italians love to eat and made eating an important part of their daily rhythm. The Dutch and other inhabitants from Northern European countries also like to eat, but seem to value this in another way than their southern neighbors.

Milano hosts a lot of exhibitions. Some weeks ago I visited a mostre in the Palazzo Reale. The exhibition showed an overview of artworks made in Milano made in the tumultuous seventies. In those years Italy went through hard times with political struggle, an economic crisis and terrorist attacks. The artworks reacted on the events that happened during those years; pictures of demonstrations on the square in front of the Duomo, paintings discussing the relation between social events and the autonomy of an artist and poetry. One of the many works on display attracted me in particular.

Food has been an important topic of art for many decades. We know the still lives of fruit and game, see the importance of food in movies and like to look at beautiful decorated cakes at the bakery around the corner. But to make leftovers part of the work is something more exeptional.

Gino di Maggio and Daniel Spoerri created an artwork halfway the 1970’s that reminded me of some more recent, namely the Last Supper by Raul Ortega Ayala which was performed and exhibited at Stroom in the Dutch city of Den Haag in 2010. Both artworks showed the leftovers of a dinner which was eaten by a group of people which wasn’t familiar until they became the main actors of each particular artwork. Although the event itself – eating the dinner – was indispensable to create the artwork, it was the display of the leftovers of that event that became important for the audience.

Both artworks where performed and displayed in different countries. However, they seem to be almost similar in actions: a group of people - whether they know each other or not – sit around a table and focus on their meal and the discussions they can have with their table mates.

No matter how similar these to works seem to be, to me there is a big difference in the level of northern and southern European ‘food exhibitionism’. In the north, everyone just eats when they feel like, whether this is at a dining table, in the train or during a walk though the city. In the south you will hardly see anyone combining one of his meals with other activities besides having a conversation with the one he is joining his meal with.

Bravo for both artists who made the events – joining a dinner while seated at a table with others – such an important work of art in both countries!