Les Tatoualgues

Seaformance prototype realized in the frame of the two-week workshop-course Sea-Sensitive Performance and Artistic Research in collaboration with Inka Auvinen, Melissa Embry Caballero, Chong Gua Khee, Viki Kontopoulou, Pia Korhonen, Romeo Ström, and Ruka Toivonen - MA students in Acting, Directing, Dance Performance, and Writing at the Theatre Academy of Uniarts Helsinki


Tattooing has long been connected to the sea. In Europe, after being banned by the Catholic Church in the 6th century for « altering divine creation », tattooing resurfaced in the 18th century during the era of maritime exploration, particularly in the Polynesian Triangle. The term "tattoo" itself comes from the Tahitian word "tatau", meaning "to mark" or "to strike." 18th-century writings describe how Polynesians used artisanal techniques, such as a wooden handle with a small shark tooth comb, delicately struck with a mallet to puncture the skin. Sailors on Bougainville and Cook’s expeditions encountered this practice and appropriate it, bringing tattoos back to Western lands as traces of their journeys. These sailors also began developing their own tattooing methods during endless voyages. Their tattoos often depicted memories of places visited in addition to common sea-themed designs like wheels, anchors, three-masted ships, and mermaids. Unlike today’s personalised tattoos, these tattoos were chosen from limited themes and their forms were recurrent with slight variations.


During several visits to the beach of the island Mustikkamaa with the group of students during the two weeks of the course, I collected green algae (Cladophora glomerata – aka 'mermaid's hair' or in Finnish 'viherahdinparta' - the green beard of the sea god Ahti) washed up on the shore. From the photo-documentation of these algae and assisted by computer and/or AI-simulator, I designed about ten « tatoualgues » (in French tattoo = tatouage / algae = algue), more or less evoking the above-mentioned history of tattooing in relation to the sea and sailors' practices. I then asked each participant to choose, if they wish, a tattoo from the collection and a part of their body where they would like it inked.

Sequel (Story)
As I was uploading the project here on the Research Catalogue the week after the workshop, I realised that I was missing a wide view of the beach on the island and its shore covered in green algae. One early morning in thick fog I went there to take this shot. As I was taking pictures from the dock towards the beach, I saw two people going for a swim. As I was walking back towards the beach, I saw them getting out of the water, and as I got closer, I realised that they were tattooed almost all over their bodies. So I took a few more shots of these two people and left. As I walked back through the forest still bathed in thick white-out, I thought that these images were probably the last images of the Data Ocean Theatre project. I smiled in the fog.